On 13/04/2017 15:06, Peter Dimov via Boost wrote:
Because the license clearly states that the owner grants a right to use, and defending in court the proposition that this grant somehow only applies for use in a copyright sense but not for use in a patent sense (as if there's a difference) will be an interesting exercise.
I would never second guess a clever lawyer. The point being made is not whether any licence is enforceable in court. Most have never really been tested in a court, even the GPL. It is about risk minimisation to a lawyer, and persuading Corporate Lawyers that the licence on some bit of open source is minimum risk or not. I have seen no persuasive argument that the BSL is perceived as less legal risk to lawyers than the Apache 2.0. From all my interaction with Corporate Legal departments over the years, never mind trying to get Professional Indemnity insurance for works covered by the BSL as against a better known licence (tl;dr forget about it, they won't insure BSL licenced code, at least in Europe), I am very sure that the Apache 2.0 is a safer, more acceptable, more inclusive, more commercially friendly licence than the BSL. New Boost libraries should as a minimum, use the Apache 2.0 licence in preference to the Boost licence. Period. Niall -- ned Productions Limited Consulting http://www.nedproductions.biz/ http://ie.linkedin.com/in/nialldouglas/