Please reverse UCITA.

Brian Densmore DensmoreB at ctbsonline.com
Thu Jul 25 19:04:57 CDT 2002


Missouri
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Kansas
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Thursday July 25, 2002 
Topic - Open Source
TO: NCCUSL Commissioners
FROM: Brian Densmore
RE: Discussion of UCITA on July 29, 2002 at NCCUSL Annual Conference

* * * *

I write to you on behalf of Computech Business Solutions, Inc., a
software services and consulting company. We are making what we
appreciate is an extraordinary request - THAT YOU REVERSE THE 1999
DECISION TO ADOPT UCITA.

UCITA was written for the proprietary (commercial, for profit) software
industry. It does not reflect the practices of the open source
community, nor the expectations of parties to an open source
transaction.

Open source software is primarily written by communities of users, often

through non-profit organizations. Open source software can be freely
copied, freely modified and the source code is freely available to
enable users to do so. All copies can be freely redistributed.

This means that everyone is free to service, adapt, fix bugs and write
compatible software. The developer has no monopoly on servicing the
product.

Because open source software can be freely distributed, the distributor
may have no contractual relationship, or indeed even know many of the
authors of the code which it is distributing.

UCITA is written for transactions involving a single license, where an
agreement is concluded, where the distributor has a direct or indirect
contractual relationship with the developer, and where there are profits
to support warranties. Many open source software transactions do not
conform to this model in any respect.

The open source community has created its own set of practices and norms
that differ widely from the commercial rules that UCITA adopts as the
standard. UCITA does not reflect the open source community's development
model, its distribution model, its license terms, nor its general
expectations.

UCITA may bring certainty to software licensing law, but only for
proprietary software distributors. NCCUSL should not adopt a law with
default terms which, if applied to an open source transaction, would
convert it into a proprietary transaction against the will of the user
and the distributor.

NCCUSL should not adopt a law which threatens the existence of an
important and growing alternative in the software market. By adopting
proprietary practices as the norm, UCITA attempts to force open source
to conform to a model based on profits and warranties.

This would destroy open source.

It is not for NCCUSL to decide which form of software development and
distribution to legally validate. NCCUSL SHOULD EITHER LEGISLATE A
SOFTWARE LAW WHICH REFLECTS BOTH PROPRIETARY AND OPEN SOURCE PRACTICES,
OR IT SHOULD REFRAIN FROM LEGISLATING.

Computech Business Solutions respectfully requests that you vote to
reverse the previous adoption of UCITA.

Brian Densmore
Associate
mailto:densmoreb at ctbsonline.com
CompuTech Business Solutions, Inc.
http://www.ctbsonline.com/
(816) 880-0988 x215




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