Microsoft is preparing to submit its
three Shared Source licences to the Open Source Initiative. Approval would
render them official open source licences.
The software vendor has released more than
150 applications under its Shared Source
licences which allow developers and users varying degrees of access to source
code. Some of those projects however are believed to lack credibility because
they aren't governed by an official open source licence.
Advertisement
"If the licences are approved, [it] should give the community additional
confidence that the code we’re sharing is truly Open Source," Jon Rosenberg,
director of Microsoft's Shared Source programme wrote in a
blog
posting.
Share Source offers three licences. The Microsoft Permissive Licence is the
least restrictive of the Microsoft licences, allowing developers to view, modify
and distribute source code. They are under no obligation to publish the code.
Microsoft Community Licence aims to promote collaborative projects, allowing
developers to view source code, but imposing some restrictions on changes and
distribution.
Microsoft Reference Licence is the most restricted of the three, only
allowing developers to view source code and study an application's inner
workings.
The Open Source Initiative validates candidate licences against the
Open source
Definition, a set of 10 criteria that includes free redistribution,
publication of source code and allowing derived works.
The submission of the Microsoft licences goes against an ongoing effort to
reduce the overall number of open source licences. There currently are nearly 60
OSI-approved licences, which is considered an obstacle to the adoption of open
source software in the enterprise.
Corporations have to study and approve each licence, as well as determine if
two or more licences can be used together. Microsoft and Oracle, for instance,
prohibit the mixing of their code with any open source code and impose penalty
licence fees on violators. Instead of approving multiple licences, companies
often opt to clear just a few open source licences and prohibit the use of all
other ones.
Comments
Have your say on this article