From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Date: Sat, 8 Apr 1995 10:15:03 -0400 From: Tom Glinos, x4302 tg@utstat.utstat.toronto.edu Subject: what, me worry? Oh yes! Topicbox-Message-UUID: 0c18a8ee-eac8-11e9-9e20-41e7f4b1d025 Message-ID: <19950408141503.7gOQnhNBjOxjhW_Cn6XTk9Umru3U99qqYnN6DZzbjXQ@z> License arrangements are made to protect and enhance the business position of the company granting the license and to ACCOMPLISH certain goals and objectives. USG made a mess and started off the "UNIX wars" when it introduced the SVR4 license a decade ago. The sad thing was, management was warned (by a small but vocal group) that the license was a stinker. But, management was convinced by the marketing droids who came up with this evil document that all would be well. This was even after private communications from major licensees to "smarten up" were passed along. What I learned was the following: (1) Lawyers are wonderful people who protect your position if you can clearly state it to them. They are not to be blamed in this case. (2) Management must understand what it's doing with its license. If the "intent" can't be explained in a few simple easy to read sentences then you have a problem. (3) Management must know what its goals and objectives are in introducing the product and appreciate the ramifications of the terms and conditions in the license. (A very hard thing to do.) It's easy come up with a bad license, it hard to come up with a good one. -- ================= Users choose DOS and MAC's over UNIX | Tom Glinos @ U of Toronto Statistics You are not expected to understand this.| tg@utstat.toronto.edu