Last year was the one of the most active years for legal developments in the history of free and open source (“FOSS”). http://lawandlifesiliconvalley.com/blog/?p=27 This year, 2008, has seen a continuation of important legal developments for FOSS. My list of the top ten FOSS legal developments in 2008 follows:
1. First Major Appellate Decision for a FOSS License. Last year, the District Court in San Francisco in Jacobsen v. Katzner decided the first case under US law interpreting an open source license. That decision had the potential to significantly undercut the ability of FOSS licensors to enforce their license. However in August, the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (”CAFC”) overturned the District Court decision and strongly supported the right of FOSS licensors to obtain copyright remedies for breach of FOSS licenses: such remedies include injunctive relief (an order by the court to the licensee to obey the license) and statutory damages of up to $150,000 for each infringed work. http://lawandlifesiliconvalley.com/blog/?p=64
2. Final End of the SCO Attack on Linux. Although SCO’s lawsuits against IBM and others was largely resolved by the decision last year against SCO in its litigation with Novell over ownership of the copyrights to UNIX, several important issues remained. This year the court confirmed its ruling against SCO and awarded Novell $2,547,817 from the amount paid to SCO by Sun. The decision is interesting because the court came to different conclusions about whether licenses to SVRX software in SCO’s agreements with Sun and Microsoft were “incidental”. This term was important because SCO did not owe royalties to Novell if the license of the SVRX software (the royalties from which would have to be paid to Novell) was ”incidental” to the licensing of Unixware. This case demonstrates the importance of careful drafting in intellectual property licenses.
3. First Settlement of Patent Infringement Litigation For an Open Source Community. Red Hat’s settlement of the Firestar litigation demonstrated the need to carefully consider the nature of open source communities on the settlement of patent litigation. Unlike traditional patent settlements, Red Hat ensured that the settlement covered other members of the community including upstream licensors of products incorporated in the Red Hat product and downstream licensees. The settlement of patent litigation for open source products needs to deal with the complexity of many open source products and communities. This reality makes settlement of patent litigagtion much more complicated for open source products than for traditional software. http://lawandlifesiliconvalley.com/blog/?s=firestar
4. Major Litigation on GPL. In December, the Software Freedom Law Center filed suit against Cisco Systems, Inc. alleging that Cisco had violated the GPLv2 and LGPLv2 in its distribution of certain software whose copyright is owned by the Free Software Foundation, including GNU C Library, GNU Coreutils, GNU Readline, GNU Parted, GNU Wget, GNU Compiler Collection, GNU Binutils, and GNU Debugger. The complaint asserts that Cisco distributed the programs without providing complete and corresponding source code as required by the GPLv2 and LGPLv2. FSF requested that an injunction be issued against Cisco and that damages and litigation costs be awarded to the FSF. The SFLC states that they filed the lawsuit reluctantly and had negotiated with Cisco for two years on the issues. The suit raises the question of whether the SFLC is becoming more willing to file suits to enforce the GPL. For example, the SFLC has been vigorously enforcing the rights under the GPLv2 for Busybox.
5. Enforcement of GPL for Busybox Continues. The Software Freedom Law Center has continued to enforce the GPLv2 on behalf of the owners of the copyright in Busybox software. Although most of these cases apparently are settled without litigation, SLFC filed suit three suits this year: Bell Products, Super Micro Computer, Inc. and Extreme Networks, Inc.
6. Open Source Litigation from Other Countries. Although litigation about open source licenses has generally been confined to Germany and the United States, one case that settled this year about the enforeceability of the GPL was in Isreal. The plaintiff, Maryanovsky, claimed that the IchessU software violated the terms of the GPL because IchessU software did include credit for him and was released under a proprietary end-user license agreement. He also suggested that an audio-visual module developed by IchessU was a derivative work, since it could not compile without his code. The case was filed in 2006, but was settled confidenitally this year.
7. SFLC Guide to Legal Issues and GPL Compliance. The increasing ubiquity of open source software as well as the litigation to enforce the GPL and other open source licenses has made understanding the obligations imposed by the GPL very important for a wide range of companies. The SFLC has been the leader in developing and enforcing the GPL. They shared their views of the legal issues in open source and the obligations imposed by the GPL in two publications: “A Legal Issues Primer for Open Source and Free Software Projects” and ”A Practical Guide for GPL Compliance”. The Primer and Guide are quite usefull. Although licensing attorneys may not agree with all of their conclusions (the nature of the law and the lack of court decisions make this statement true about most open source license issues), the Primer and the Guide should be read by any lawyer working with open source legal issues.
8. American Law Institute Publishes Draft of Principles of the Law of Software Contracts with Significant Problems for Open Source Software. The ALI is a very prestigious and influential non profit institution whose purpose is “to promote the clarification and simplification of the law and its better adaptation to social needs.” The Principles state that the “best practices” in software licensing would be to include two new “non disclaimable” warranties which would result in significant problems for the open source community. The warranties are the (1) warranty of non infringement of intellectual property rights (such as patents or copyrights) if the contributor knew or should have known of the infringement and the contributor holds himself out by occupation as having knowledge or skill peculiar to the software and (2) warranty of no hidden material defects. Current law (and all OSI approved licenses) permit the contributor (and any licensor) of open source software to completely disclaim all warranties i.e. promises about performance or non infringement which could result in liability to a contributor or a licensor(so called AS IS provisions). If accepted by the courts, these recommendations would have a significantly negative effect on open source licensors. http://lawandlifesiliconvalley.com/blog/?p=56.
9. Publication of Version 1.3 of GNU Free Documentation License. The new version permits the use of the FDL with the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike License (CCASL). The draft is an interim one and SFLC is working on FDL 2.0. However, the Wikimedia Foundation requested the FDL be made compatible with the CCASL. This change recognizes the need for the two major branches of “free” content licenses to be compatible just as the GPLv3 was modified to be compatible with the Apache license.
10. Project Governance Concerns Become More Important. The recent fork in the Twiki community (an open source wiki project) demonstrates the need for a community to think about how it will manage itself. As open source projects have greater economic value, the potential for the community to split over decisions regarding the direction of the project (in particular, commercialization) will increase. Communities need to develop processes to discuss these issues and come to a conclusion that is supported by the community. Although forks are always an option for open source projects, they generally create significant loss of momentum and can doom a project if it has competitors offering similar functionality. In the case of Twiki, the ownership of the Twiki trademark by Peter Theony, the project leader, was critical to the control of the project.
As I mentioned in my post on Jacobsen v. Katzer http://lawandlifesiliconvalley.blogspot.com/2007/08/new-open-source-legal-decision-jacobsen.html, the issue of remedies for the breach of open source licenses is a difficult one. A recent decision in the Northern District of California, Netbula, LLC v. Storage Technology Corporation (”STC”), is a reminder of these difficulties. Netbula tried to convince the court that STC’s alleged violation of the license agreement should be copyright infringement as well as breach of contract. As I noted in that post, most licensors prefer copyright infringement remedies:
Generally, the remedy for contract violations under US law is damages, not “injunctive relief” (which means that the court order a party to cease their violation). On the other hand, copyright infringement generally includes a presumption that injunctive relief is appropriate. Thus, the question of whether the violation of a license is a contract violiation or copyright infringement (it can be both) is very important, because licensors would prefer to obtain an injunction prohibiting the breach of the license. The question turns on a nuanced legal issue of whether the term in the license is a “restriction on the scope” of the license or a covenant. In the first case, the failure to comply with the provision means that the licensee is outside the scope of the license and thus is a copyright infringer (as well as liable for breach of the contract). On the other hand, if the term is merely a covenant, then the failure to comply with it is a breach of contract. The most celebrated case dealing with this issue involved the Java license between Sun and Microsoft in which the court found that the obligation on Microsoft to meet the Java compatability tests was a covenant, not a restriction on the scope of the license and the court denied Sun an injunction on those grounds (Sun got an injunction for unfair competition).
The Netbula decision demonstrates the difficulty of proving that a license obligation is a “condition”. Briefly, STC licensed Netbula’s SDK for development and runtime version for distribution. Netbula alleges that STC used the SDK for more users than was permitted and on operating systems that were not permitted. The license grant is as follows: ” a non-exclusive, perpetual, irrevocable license for Storagetek’s employees, consultants and subsidiaries for up to ONE user(s) for each of the licenses purchased, to use the PowerRPC SDK Product under Windows NT and 95/98 platforms; each user can only use the software on one computer.” The court found that the limitation on users was not a condition, but only a covenant. Consequently, the remedies for breach of the license would be damages and the breach was not copyright infringement. On the other hand, the court found that the restriction on the use of the SDK for certain operating sytems was a condition and its breach would be copyright infringement. However, Netbula did not prove that STC had used the SDK on the non permitted operating system.
Netbula also alleges that STC did not pay the royalties for all of the copies which it distributed. The license provided for payment of a fixed amount for 1000 copies. The court found that this obligation is covenant, not a condition.
This case demonstrates the difficulties in making these distinctions. The case demonstrates the reluctance of the courts to find a “limitation” on the license and provide a licensor with copyright infringement remedies. This case is important for open source licensors: even though the Jacobsen case was probably wrongly decided, this issue is a difficult one. The appeal of the Jacobsen case has the potential for disaster for open source licensors: if the CAFC decides the issue incorrectly and uses sweeping language (as opposed to narrowly focusing on the provisions of the Artistic License), open source licensors will be in a considerably weaker position in pursuing licensees who are in breach.