A software license is a legal instrument governing the use or redistribution of software.
Since the 1970s, software copyright has been recognized in the United States. Despite the copyright being recognized, most companies prefer to sell licenses rather than copies of the software because it enables them to enforce stricter terms on redistribution. Very few purchasers read any part of the license, initially shrink-wrap contracts and now most commonly encountered as clickwrap or browsewrap. The enforceability of this kind of license is a matter of controversy and is limited in some jurisdictions. Service-level agreements are another type of software license where the vendor agrees to provide a level of service to the purchaser, often backed by financial penalties.
Copyleft is a type of free license that mandates derivative works to be licensed. The other types of free license lack this requirement: for permissive licenses, attribution is typically the only requirement, and public-domain-equivalent licenses have no restrictions. The proliferation of open-source licenses has compounded license compatibility issues, but all share some features: allowing redistribution and derivative works under the same license, unrestricted access to the source code, and nondiscrimination between different uses—in particular, allowing commercial use.
Free and open | Non-free | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Public domain and equivalent licenses | Permissive license | Copyleft | Noncommercial license | Proprietary license | Trade secret | |
Description | Waives copyright protection | Grants use rights, including right to relicense (allows proprietization, license compatibility) | Grants use rights, forbids proprietization | Grants rights for noncommercial use only. | Traditional use of copyright; no rights need be granted | No information made public |
Notable software licenses | PD, CC0 | MIT, Apache, MPL, BSD | GPL, AGPL | JRL | Proprietary software |
Software copyright
The source code (or compiled binaries in the form of object code) of a computer program is protected by copyright law that vests the owner with the exclusive right to copy the code. The underlying ideas or algorithms are not protected by copyright law, but are often treated as a trade secret and concealed by such methods as non-disclosure agreements. Software copyright has been recognized since the mid-1970s and is vested in the company that makes the software, not the employees or contractors who wrote it.
Rights granted | Public domain and equivalent | Permissive FOSS license (e.g. BSD license) | Copyleft FOSS license (e.g. GPL) | Freeware / Shareware / Freemium | Proprietary license | Trade secret |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Copyright retained | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Right to perform | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No |
Right to display | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No |
Right to copy | Yes | Yes | Yes | Often | No | Lawsuits are filed by the owner against copyright infringement the most |
Right to modify | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | No |
Right to distribute | Yes | Yes, under same license | Yes, under same license | Often | No | No |
Right to sublicense | Yes | Yes | No | No | No | No |
Example software | SQLite, ImageJ | Apache web server, ToyBox | Linux kernel, GIMP, OBS | Irfanview, Winamp | Windows, the majority of commercial video games and their DRMs, Spotify, xSplit, TIDAL | Server-side Cloud computing programs and services, forensic applications, and other line-of-business work. |
Proprietary software licenses
The tendency to license proprietary software, rather than sell it, dates from the time period before the existence, then the scope of software copyright protection was clear. These licenses have continued in use after software copyright was recognized in the courts, and are considered to grant the company extra protection compared to copyright law. According to United States federal law, a company can restrict the parties to which it sells but it cannot prevent a buyer from reselling the product. Software licensing agreements usually prohibit resale, enabling the company to maximize revenue.
Traditionally, software was distributed in the form of binary object code that could not be understood or modified by the user, but could be downloaded and run. The user bought a perpetual license to use a particular version of the software.Software as service (SaaS) vendors—who have the majority market share in application software as of 2023[update]—rarely offer perpetual licenses. SaaS licenses are usually temporary and charged on a pay-per-usage or subscription basis, although other revenue models such as freemium are also used. For customers, the advantages of temporary licenses include reduced upfront cost, increased flexibility, and lower overall cost compared to a perpetual license. In some cases, the steep one-time cost demanded by sellers of traditional software were out of the reach of smaller businesses, but pay-per-use SaaS models makes the software affordable.
End-user license agreement (EULA)
Initially, end-user license agreements (EULAs) were printed on either the shrinkwrap packaging encasing the product (see shrink-wrap contract) or a piece of paper. The license often stipulated that a customer agreed if they did not return the product within a specified interval. More recently, EULAs are most commonly found as clickwrap or browsewrap where the user's clicks or continued browsing are taken as a sign of agreement. As a result of the end of physical constraints, length increased. Most EULAs have been designed so that it is very difficult to read and understand them, but easy to agree to the licensing terms without reading them. Regardless of how easy it is to access, very few consumers read any part of the license agreement. Most assume the terms are unobjectionable or barely notice agreeing while installing the software. Companies take advantage of consumers' inattention to insert provisions into EULAs.
Proprietary software is usually offered under a restrictive license that bans copying and reuse and often limits the purchaser to using the software on one computer.Source code is rarely available. Derivative software works and reverse engineering are usually explicitly prohibited. Many EULAs allow the vendor to collect information about the user and use it in unrestricted ways. Some EULAs restrict the ability of users to exercise copyright over derivative work made using the software, such as creative creations in the virtual worlds of video games.
Most disclaim any liability for harms caused by the product, and prevent the purchaser from accessing the court system to seek a remedy. Furthermore, many EULAs allow the vendor to change the terms at any time and the customer must choose between agreeing or ceasing use of the product, without getting a refund. It is common for EULAs to allow unilateral termination by the vendor for any number of vague reasons or none at all.
EULAs, almost always offered on a take-it-or-leave-it basis as a non-negotiable condition for using the software, are very far from the prototypical contract where both parties fully understand the terms and agree of their own free will. There has been substantial debate on to what extent the agreements can be considered binding. Before 1996 in the United States, clickwrap or browsewrap licenses were not held to be binding, but since then they often have been. Under the New Digital Content Directive effective in the European Union, EULAs are only enforceable to the extent that they do not breach reasonable consumer expectations. The gap between expectations and the content of EULAs is especially wide when it comes to restrictions on copying and transferring ownership of digital content. Many EULAs contain stipulations that are likely unenforceable depending on the jurisdiction. Software vendors keep these unenforceable provisions in the agreements, perhaps because users rarely resort to the legal system to challenge them.
Service-level agreement (SLA)
Service-level agreements are often used for enterprise software and guarantee a level of service, such as software performance or time to respond to issue raised by the customer. Many stipulate financial penalties if the service falls short of the agreed standard. SLAs often cover such aspects as availability, reliability, price, and security using quantifiable metrics. Multi-tier SLAs are common in cloud computing because of the use of different computing services that may be managed by different companies. SLAs in cloud computing are an area under active research as of 2024[update].
Free and open-source software licenses
Before the open-source movement in the 1980s, almost all software was proprietary and did not disclose its source code. Open-source licensing is intended to maximize openness and minimize barriers to software use, dissemination, and follow-on innovation.
Open-source licenses share a number of key characteristics:
- Free redistribution: Anyone can redistribute the software, for free or for cost, without the permission of or payment to the copyright holder.
- Unrestricted, public access to the source code—what the term open source refers to
- Users may modify the software and release derivative works, either under the same terms as the free software or, in some cases, under a different license.
- Nondiscrimination between different uses, including commercial use.
The Open Source Initiative vets and approves new open-source licenses that comply with its Open Source Definition.
Types of open-source licenses
- If software is in the public domain, the owner's copyright has been extinguished and anyone may use the work with no copyright restrictions.
- Non-restrictive licenses allow free reuse of the work without restrictions on the licensing of derivative works. Many of them require attribution of the original creators. The first open-source license was a non-restrictive license intended to facilitate scientific collaboration: the Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD), named after the University of California, Berkeley in 1978.
- Copyleft licenses (also known as "share-alike"), require source code to be distributed with software and require the source code be made available under a similar license. Copyleft represents the farthest that reuse can be restricted while still being considered free software. Strong copyleft licenses, such as the GNU General Public License (GPL), allow for no reuse in proprietary software, while weak copyleft, such as the related GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL), do allow reuse in some circumstances. Copyleft licenses are perceived by developers as a way of ensuring that their contributions do not create unfair advantages for others. Another motivation for choosing copyleft is to promote open source through its requirements for derivative works: Stallman states that "the central idea of copyleft is to use copyright law, but flip it over to serve the opposite of its usual purpose: instead of a means of privatizing software, [copyright] becomes a means of keeping software free."
Outside of software, noncommercial-only Creative Commons licenses have become popular among some artists who wish to prevent others from profiting excessively from their work. However, software that is made available for noncommercial use only is not considered open source.Sun Microsystems' noncommercial-only Java Research License was rejected by the open-source community, and in 2006 the company released most of Java under the GPL.
Compatibility
Since 1989, a variety of open-source licenses for software have been created. Choosing an open-source software license has grown increasingly difficult due to the proliferation of licenses, many of which are only trivially distinct. Many licenses are incompatible with each other, hampering the goals of the free software movement. Translation issues, ambiguity in licensing terms, and incompatibility of some licenses with the law in certain jurisdictions compounds the problem.
Although downloading an open-source module is quick and easy, complying with the licensing terms can be more difficult. The amount of software dependencies means that engineers working on complex projects must often rely on software license management software in order to help them achieve compliance with the licensing terms of open-source components. Many open-source software files do not unambiguously state the license, increasing the difficulties of compliance. When combining code bases, the original licenses can be maintained for separate components, and the larger work released under a compatible license. This compatibility is often one-way. Public domain content can be used anywhere as there is no copyright claim, but code acquired under any almost any set of terms cannot be waved to the public domain. Permissive licenses can be used within copyleft works, but copyleft material cannot be released under a permissive license. Some weak copyleft licenses can be used under the GPL and are said to be GPL-compatible. GPL software can only be used under the GPL or AGPL.
Enforceability
Free and open-source software licenses have been successfully enforced in civil court since the mid-2000s. Courts have found that distributing software indicates acceptance of the license's terms. However, developers typically achieve compliance without lawsuits. Social pressures, such as the potential for community backlash, are often sufficient.Cease and desist letters are a common method to bring companies back into compliance, especially in Germany.
A long-debated subject within the FOSS community is whether open-source licenses are "bare licenses" or contracts. A bare license is a set of conditions under which actions otherwise restricted by intellectual property laws are permitted. Under the bare license interpretation, advocated by the Free Software Foundation (FSF), a case is brought to court by the copyright holder as copyright infringement. Under the contract interpretation, a case can be brought to court by an involved party as a breach of contract. United States and French courts have tried cases under both interpretations.
Value
More than 90 percent of companies use open-source software as a component of their proprietary software. The decision to use open-source software, or even engage with open-source projects to improve existing open-source software, is typically a pragmatic business decision. When proprietary software is in direct competition with an open-source alternative, research has found conflicting results on the effect of the competition on the proprietary product's price and quality.
For decades, some companies have made servicing of an open-source software product for enterprise users as their business model. These companies control an open-source software product, and instead of charging for licensing or use, charge for improvements, integration, and other servicing.Software as a service (SaaS) products based on open-source components are increasingly common.
Open-source software is preferred for scientific applications, because it increases transparency and aids in the validation and acceptance of scientific results.
See also
- Comparison of free and open-source software licenses
- Digital rights management
- Copy protection
- Dual-licensing
- License-free software
- License manager
- Product activation
- Product key
- Rights Expression Language
- Software metering
- Terms of service
- Perpetual access
- Copyright licenses (category)
- Software by license (category)
References
- O'Regan 2022, p. 403.
- "Licenses". Open Source Initiative. 16 September 2022. Retrieved 12 May 2024.
- Sen, Subramaniam & Nelson 2008, p. 212.
- Morin et al. 2012, Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) Licensing.
- O'Regan 2022, p. 394.
- O'Regan 2022, p. 396.
- Fagundes & Perzanowski 2020, p. 524.
- Davila 2015, p. 6.
- Boyle 2003, p. 45.
- O'Regan 2022, pp. 394–396.
- Larry Troan (2005). "Open Source from a Proprietary Perspective" (PDF). RedHat Summit 2006 Nashville. redhat.com. p. 10. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 January 2014. Retrieved 29 December 2015.
- Terasaki 2013, p. 469.
- Terasaki 2013, pp. 469–470.
- Clohessy et al. 2020, pp. 40–41.
- Watt 2023, p. 4.
- Dempsey & Kelliher 2018, p. 48.
- Dempsey & Kelliher 2018, pp. 48, 57.
- Dempsey & Kelliher 2018, pp. 61–63.
- Dempsey & Kelliher 2018, p. 2.
- Corbett 2019, p. 455.
- Kim 2016, pp. 12, 21.
- Bakos et al. 2014, p. 1.
- Ben-Shahar & Schneider 2014, p. 68.
- Terasaki 2013, pp. 485–486.
- Corbett 2019, pp. 456–457.
- Morin et al. 2012, Proprietary Licensing.
- Carpenter 2023, pp. 485–486.
- Ahuja 2016, p. 381.
- Corbett 2019, p. 456.
- Carpenter 2023, pp. 480–481.
- Carpenter 2023, pp. 481–482.
- Carpenter 2023, p. 485.
- Carpenter 2023, pp. 482–483.
- Carpenter 2023, p. 478.
- Corbett 2019, p. 460.
- Terasaki 2013, p. 471.
- Oprysk & Sein 2020, pp. 620–621.
- Corbett 2019, p. 461.
- O'Regan 2022, pp. 151, 219, 224, 405.
- Qazi et al. 2024, Performance evaluation parameters.
- Rana & Ziegler 2010, p. 188.
- Qazi et al. 2024, Conclusion.
- Bernelin 2020, p. 96.
- Sen, Subramaniam & Nelson 2008, p. 209.
- Morin et al. 2012, Open Source versus Closed Source.
- Morin et al. 2012, Permissive versus Copyleft.
- Smith 2022, § 3.2.1.1.
- Sen, Subramaniam & Nelson 2008, pp. 211–212.
- St. Laurent 2004, pp. 38–39.
- Davila 2015, p. 5.
- Davila 2015, pp. 5–6.
- Joy 2022, pp. 990–992.
- Sen, Subramaniam & Nelson 2008, p. 208.
- Alamoudi et al. 2020, p. 537.
- Bernelin 2020, p. 94.
- Morin et al. 2012, Compatibility, Proliferation, Fragmentation, and Directionality.
- Bernelin 2020, p. 98.
- Bernelin 2020, pp. 100, 102.
- Ombredanne 2020, p. 105.
- Ombredanne 2020, p. 106.
- St. Laurent 2004, pp. 159–163.
- Smith 2022, § 3.3.
- Smith 2022, § 3.4.1.
- Smith 2022, p. 106.
- St. Laurent 2004, pp. 158–159.
- Ballhausen 2022, p. 127.
- Walden 2022, § 1.1.
- Smith 2022, § 3.4.2.
- Smith 2022, § 3.4.
- Butler et al. 2022, p. 1.
- Butler et al. 2022, p. 11152.
- Davila 2015, p. 7.
- Zhou & Choudhary 2022, p. 731.
- August et al. 2021, pp. 1–2.
- August et al. 2021, p. 1.
Sources
- Ahuja, Neha (2016). "Commercial Creations: The Role of End User License Agreements in Controlling the Exploitation of User Generated Content". John Marshall Review of Intellectual Property Law. 16: 381–410.
- Alamoudi, Emad; Mehmood, Rashid; Aljudaibi, Wajdi; Albeshri, Aiiad; Hasan, Syed Hamid (2020). "Open Source and Open Data Licenses in the Smart Infrastructure Era: Review and License Selection Frameworks". Smart Infrastructure and Applications: Foundations for Smarter Cities and Societies. Springer International Publishing. pp. 537–559. ISBN 978-3-030-13705-2.
- Anesa, Patrizia (1 March 2014). "Translating end-user license agreements: issues, strategies and techniques". ASp. La revue du GERAS. 65 (65): 87–102. doi:10.4000/asp.4205. ISSN 1246-8185.
- August, Terrence; Chen, Wei; Zhu, Kevin (2021). "Competition Among Proprietary and Open-Source Software Firms: The Role of Licensing in Strategic Contribution". Management Science. 67 (5): 3041–3066. doi:10.1287/mnsc.2020.3674.
- Bakos, Yannis; Marotta-Wurgler, Florencia; Trossen, David R. (2014). "Does Anyone Read the Fine Print? Consumer Attention to Standard-Form Contracts". The Journal of Legal Studies. 43 (1): 1–35. doi:10.1086/674424.
- Ballhausen, Miriam (2022). "Copyright Enforcement". Open Source Law, Policy and Practice. Oxford University Press. pp. 126–140. ISBN 978-0-19-886234-5.
- Ben-Shahar, Omri; Schneider, Carl E. (2014). More Than You Wanted to Know: The Failure of Mandated Disclosure. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-16170-9.
- Bernelin, Margo (2020). "The compatibility of open/free licences: a legal imbroglio". International Journal of Law and Information Technology. 28 (2): 93–111. doi:10.1093/ijlit/eaaa010.
- Boyle, James (2003). "The Second Enclosure Movement and the Construction of the Public Domain". Law and Contemporary Problems. 66 (1): 33–74. ISSN 0023-9186.
- Butler, Simon; Gamalielsson, Jonas; Lundell, Björn; Brax, Christoffer; Mattsson, Anders; Gustavsson, Tomas; Feist, Jonas; Kvarnström, Bengt; Lönroth, Erik (2022). "Considerations and challenges for the adoption of open source components in software-intensive businesses". Journal of Systems and Software. 186. Elsevier BV: 111152. doi:10.1016/j.jss.2021.111152. ISSN 0164-1212.
- Carpenter, Owen (2023). "EULA, or Eulogy? Reckoning End User License Agreements and Near-Future Cyborgs". Health Matrix: Journal of Law-Medicine. 33: 467–498.
- Clohessy, Trevor; Acton, Thomas; Morgan, Lorraine (2020). "The SaaS Payoff: Measuring the Business Value of Provisioning Software-as-a-Service Technologies". Measuring the Business Value of Cloud Computing. Springer International Publishing. pp. 39–55. ISBN 978-3-030-43198-3.
- Corbett, Susan (2019). "Computer game licences: The EULA and its discontents". Computer Law & Security Review. 35 (4): 453–461. doi:10.1016/j.clsr.2019.03.007. ISSN 0267-3649.
- Davila, Jacinto (2015). "The Political Logic of Free, Libre, Open Source Software". Societal Benefits of Freely Accessible Technologies and Knowledge Resources. IGI Global. pp. 1–24. ISBN 978-1-4666-8337-2.
- Dempsey, David; Kelliher, Felicity (2018). Industry Trends in Cloud Computing: Alternative Business-to-Business Revenue Models. Springer International Publishing. ISBN 978-3-319-87693-1.
- Fagundes, Dave; Perzanowski, Aaron (November 2020). "Abandoning Copyright". William & Mary Law Review. 62 (2): 487–569.
- Joy, Reagan (2022). "The Tragedy of the Creative Commons: An Analysis of How Overlapping Intellectual Property Rights Undermine the Use of Permissive Licensing". Case Western Reserve Law Review. 72 (4): 977–1013.
- Kim, Nancy S. (2016). "Wrap contracting and the online environment: Causes and cures". Research Handbook on Electronic Commerce Law. Edward Elgar Publishing. ISBN 978-1-78347-992-4.
- Langer, Arthur M. (2016). Guide to Software Development: Designing and Managing the Life Cycle. Springer. ISBN 978-1-4471-6799-0.
- Morin, Andrew; Urban, Jennifer; Sliz, Piotr (2012). "A Quick Guide to Software Licensing for the Scientist-Programmer". PLOS Computational Biology. 8 (7): e1002598. Bibcode:2012PLSCB...8E2598M. doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002598. ISSN 1553-7358. PMID 22844236. This article incorporates text available under the CC BY 4.0 license.
- Ombredanne, Philippe (2020). "Free and Open Source Software License Compliance: Tools for Software Composition Analysis". Computer. 53 (10): 105–109. doi:10.1109/MC.2020.3011082.
- Oprysk, Liliia; Sein, Karin (June 2020). "Limitations in End-User Licensing Agreements: Is There a Lack of Conformity Under the New Digital Content Directive?". IIC - International Review of Intellectual Property and Competition Law. 51 (5): 594–623. doi:10.1007/s40319-020-00941-y.
- O'Regan, Gerard (2022). Concise Guide to Software Engineering: From Fundamentals to Application Methods. Springer Nature. ISBN 978-3-031-07816-3.
- Qazi, Faiza; Kwak, Daehan; Khan, Fiaz Gul; Ali, Farman; Khan, Sami Ullah (2024). "Service Level Agreement in cloud computing: Taxonomy, prospects, and challenges". Internet of Things. 25: 101126. doi:10.1016/j.iot.2024.101126. ISSN 2542-6605.
- Rana, Omer; Ziegler, Wolfgang (2010). "Research Challenges in Managing and Using Service Level Agreements". Grids, P2P and Services Computing. Springer. ISBN 978-1-4419-6793-0.
- Sen, Ravi; Subramaniam, Chandrasekar; Nelson, Matthew L. (2008). "Determinants of the Choice of Open Source Software License". Journal of Management Information Systems. 25 (3). Informa UK Limited: 207–240. doi:10.2753/mis0742-1222250306. ISSN 0742-1222.
- Smith, P McCoy (20 October 2022). "Copyright, Contract, and Licensing in Open Source". Open Source Law, Policy and Practice. Oxford University PressOxford. pp. 71–112. doi:10.1093/oso/9780198862345.003.0003. ISBN 978-0-19-886234-5.
- St. Laurent, Andrew M. (2004). Understanding Open Source and Free Software Licensing. O'Reilly Media. ISBN 978-0596005818.
- Terasaki, Michael (2013). "Do End User License Agreements Bind Normal People". Western State University Law Review. 41: 467.
- Walden, Ian (20 October 2022). "Open Source as Philosophy, Methodology, and Commerce: Using Law with Attitude". Open Source Law, Policy and Practice. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/oso/9780198862345.003.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-886234-5.
- Watt, Andy (2023). Building Modern SaaS Applications with C# And . NET: Build, Deploy, and Maintain Professional SaaS Applications. Packt. ISBN 978-1-80461-087-9.
- Zhou, Zach Zhizhong; Choudhary, Vidyanand (2022). "Impact of Competition from Open Source Software on Proprietary Software". Production and Operations Management. 31 (2): 731–742. doi:10.1111/poms.13575.
Further reading
- Classen, H. Ward (2022). The Practical Guide to Software Licensing and Cloud Computing. American Bar Association. ISBN 978-1-64105-750-9.
External links
A software license is a legal instrument governing the use or redistribution of software Diagram of software under various licenses according to the FSF and their The Free Software Definition on the left side free software on the right side proprietary software On both sides and therefore mostly orthogonal free download Freeware Since the 1970s software copyright has been recognized in the United States Despite the copyright being recognized most companies prefer to sell licenses rather than copies of the software because it enables them to enforce stricter terms on redistribution Very few purchasers read any part of the license initially shrink wrap contracts and now most commonly encountered as clickwrap or browsewrap The enforceability of this kind of license is a matter of controversy and is limited in some jurisdictions Service level agreements are another type of software license where the vendor agrees to provide a level of service to the purchaser often backed by financial penalties Copyleft is a type of free license that mandates derivative works to be licensed The other types of free license lack this requirement for permissive licenses attribution is typically the only requirement and public domain equivalent licenses have no restrictions The proliferation of open source licenses has compounded license compatibility issues but all share some features allowing redistribution and derivative works under the same license unrestricted access to the source code and nondiscrimination between different uses in particular allowing commercial use Free and open Non freePublic domain and equivalent licenses Permissive license Copyleft Noncommercial license Proprietary license Trade secretDescription Waives copyright protection Grants use rights including right to relicense allows proprietization license compatibility Grants use rights forbids proprietization Grants rights for noncommercial use only Traditional use of copyright no rights need be granted No information made publicNotable software licenses PD CC0 MIT Apache MPL BSD GPL AGPL JRL Proprietary softwareSoftware copyrightThe source code or compiled binaries in the form of object code of a computer program is protected by copyright law that vests the owner with the exclusive right to copy the code The underlying ideas or algorithms are not protected by copyright law but are often treated as a trade secret and concealed by such methods as non disclosure agreements Software copyright has been recognized since the mid 1970s and is vested in the company that makes the software not the employees or contractors who wrote it Software licenses and rights granted in context of the copyright according to Mark Webbink Expanded by freeware and sublicensing Rights granted Public domain and equivalent Permissive FOSS license e g BSD license Copyleft FOSS license e g GPL Freeware Shareware Freemium Proprietary license Trade secretCopyright retained No Yes Yes Yes Yes YesRight to perform Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes NoRight to display Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes NoRight to copy Yes Yes Yes Often No Lawsuits are filed by the owner against copyright infringement the mostRight to modify Yes Yes Yes No No NoRight to distribute Yes Yes under same license Yes under same license Often No NoRight to sublicense Yes Yes No No No NoExample software SQLite ImageJ Apache web server ToyBox Linux kernel GIMP OBS Irfanview Winamp Windows the majority of commercial video games and their DRMs Spotify xSplit TIDAL Server side Cloud computing programs and services forensic applications and other line of business work Proprietary software licensesA brief written out beta test software license issued by Macromedia in 1995 The tendency to license proprietary software rather than sell it dates from the time period before the existence then the scope of software copyright protection was clear These licenses have continued in use after software copyright was recognized in the courts and are considered to grant the company extra protection compared to copyright law According to United States federal law a company can restrict the parties to which it sells but it cannot prevent a buyer from reselling the product Software licensing agreements usually prohibit resale enabling the company to maximize revenue Traditionally software was distributed in the form of binary object code that could not be understood or modified by the user but could be downloaded and run The user bought a perpetual license to use a particular version of the software Software as service SaaS vendors who have the majority market share in application software as of 2023 update rarely offer perpetual licenses SaaS licenses are usually temporary and charged on a pay per usage or subscription basis although other revenue models such as freemium are also used For customers the advantages of temporary licenses include reduced upfront cost increased flexibility and lower overall cost compared to a perpetual license In some cases the steep one time cost demanded by sellers of traditional software were out of the reach of smaller businesses but pay per use SaaS models makes the software affordable End user license agreement EULA Initially end user license agreements EULAs were printed on either the shrinkwrap packaging encasing the product see shrink wrap contract or a piece of paper The license often stipulated that a customer agreed if they did not return the product within a specified interval More recently EULAs are most commonly found as clickwrap or browsewrap where the user s clicks or continued browsing are taken as a sign of agreement As a result of the end of physical constraints length increased Most EULAs have been designed so that it is very difficult to read and understand them but easy to agree to the licensing terms without reading them Regardless of how easy it is to access very few consumers read any part of the license agreement Most assume the terms are unobjectionable or barely notice agreeing while installing the software Companies take advantage of consumers inattention to insert provisions into EULAs Proprietary software is usually offered under a restrictive license that bans copying and reuse and often limits the purchaser to using the software on one computer Source code is rarely available Derivative software works and reverse engineering are usually explicitly prohibited Many EULAs allow the vendor to collect information about the user and use it in unrestricted ways Some EULAs restrict the ability of users to exercise copyright over derivative work made using the software such as creative creations in the virtual worlds of video games Most disclaim any liability for harms caused by the product and prevent the purchaser from accessing the court system to seek a remedy Furthermore many EULAs allow the vendor to change the terms at any time and the customer must choose between agreeing or ceasing use of the product without getting a refund It is common for EULAs to allow unilateral termination by the vendor for any number of vague reasons or none at all EULAs almost always offered on a take it or leave it basis as a non negotiable condition for using the software are very far from the prototypical contract where both parties fully understand the terms and agree of their own free will There has been substantial debate on to what extent the agreements can be considered binding Before 1996 in the United States clickwrap or browsewrap licenses were not held to be binding but since then they often have been Under the New Digital Content Directive effective in the European Union EULAs are only enforceable to the extent that they do not breach reasonable consumer expectations The gap between expectations and the content of EULAs is especially wide when it comes to restrictions on copying and transferring ownership of digital content Many EULAs contain stipulations that are likely unenforceable depending on the jurisdiction Software vendors keep these unenforceable provisions in the agreements perhaps because users rarely resort to the legal system to challenge them Service level agreement SLA Service level agreements are often used for enterprise software and guarantee a level of service such as software performance or time to respond to issue raised by the customer Many stipulate financial penalties if the service falls short of the agreed standard SLAs often cover such aspects as availability reliability price and security using quantifiable metrics Multi tier SLAs are common in cloud computing because of the use of different computing services that may be managed by different companies SLAs in cloud computing are an area under active research as of 2024 update Free and open source software licensesBefore the open source movement in the 1980s almost all software was proprietary and did not disclose its source code Open source licensing is intended to maximize openness and minimize barriers to software use dissemination and follow on innovation Open source licenses share a number of key characteristics Free redistribution Anyone can redistribute the software for free or for cost without the permission of or payment to the copyright holder Unrestricted public access to the source code what the term open source refers to Users may modify the software and release derivative works either under the same terms as the free software or in some cases under a different license Nondiscrimination between different uses including commercial use The Open Source Initiative vets and approves new open source licenses that comply with its Open Source Definition Types of open source licenses The most popular open source licenses as of 2022 are the Apache License permissive the MIT License permissive and the GPL copyleft If software is in the public domain the owner s copyright has been extinguished and anyone may use the work with no copyright restrictions Non restrictive licenses allow free reuse of the work without restrictions on the licensing of derivative works Many of them require attribution of the original creators The first open source license was a non restrictive license intended to facilitate scientific collaboration the Berkeley Software Distribution BSD named after the University of California Berkeley in 1978 Copyleft licenses also known as share alike require source code to be distributed with software and require the source code be made available under a similar license Copyleft represents the farthest that reuse can be restricted while still being considered free software Strong copyleft licenses such as the GNU General Public License GPL allow for no reuse in proprietary software while weak copyleft such as the related GNU Lesser General Public License LGPL do allow reuse in some circumstances Copyleft licenses are perceived by developers as a way of ensuring that their contributions do not create unfair advantages for others Another motivation for choosing copyleft is to promote open source through its requirements for derivative works Stallman states that the central idea of copyleft is to use copyright law but flip it over to serve the opposite of its usual purpose instead of a means of privatizing software copyright becomes a means of keeping software free Outside of software noncommercial only Creative Commons licenses have become popular among some artists who wish to prevent others from profiting excessively from their work However software that is made available for noncommercial use only is not considered open source Sun Microsystems noncommercial only Java Research License was rejected by the open source community and in 2006 the company released most of Java under the GPL Compatibility Compatibility chart for some open source software licenses Since 1989 a variety of open source licenses for software have been created Choosing an open source software license has grown increasingly difficult due to the proliferation of licenses many of which are only trivially distinct Many licenses are incompatible with each other hampering the goals of the free software movement Translation issues ambiguity in licensing terms and incompatibility of some licenses with the law in certain jurisdictions compounds the problem Although downloading an open source module is quick and easy complying with the licensing terms can be more difficult The amount of software dependencies means that engineers working on complex projects must often rely on software license management software in order to help them achieve compliance with the licensing terms of open source components Many open source software files do not unambiguously state the license increasing the difficulties of compliance When combining code bases the original licenses can be maintained for separate components and the larger work released under a compatible license This compatibility is often one way Public domain content can be used anywhere as there is no copyright claim but code acquired under any almost any set of terms cannot be waved to the public domain Permissive licenses can be used within copyleft works but copyleft material cannot be released under a permissive license Some weak copyleft licenses can be used under the GPL and are said to be GPL compatible GPL software can only be used under the GPL or AGPL Enforceability Free and open source software licenses have been successfully enforced in civil court since the mid 2000s Courts have found that distributing software indicates acceptance of the license s terms However developers typically achieve compliance without lawsuits Social pressures such as the potential for community backlash are often sufficient Cease and desist letters are a common method to bring companies back into compliance especially in Germany A long debated subject within the FOSS community is whether open source licenses are bare licenses or contracts A bare license is a set of conditions under which actions otherwise restricted by intellectual property laws are permitted Under the bare license interpretation advocated by the Free Software Foundation FSF a case is brought to court by the copyright holder as copyright infringement Under the contract interpretation a case can be brought to court by an involved party as a breach of contract United States and French courts have tried cases under both interpretations Value More than 90 percent of companies use open source software as a component of their proprietary software The decision to use open source software or even engage with open source projects to improve existing open source software is typically a pragmatic business decision When proprietary software is in direct competition with an open source alternative research has found conflicting results on the effect of the competition on the proprietary product s price and quality For decades some companies have made servicing of an open source software product for enterprise users as their business model These companies control an open source software product and instead of charging for licensing or use charge for improvements integration and other servicing Software as a service SaaS products based on open source components are increasingly common Open source software is preferred for scientific applications because it increases transparency and aids in the validation and acceptance of scientific results See alsoComparison of free and open source software licenses Digital rights management Copy protection Dual licensing License free software License manager Product activation Product key Rights Expression Language Software metering Terms of service Perpetual access Copyright licenses category Software by license category ReferencesO Regan 2022 p 403 Licenses Open Source Initiative 16 September 2022 Retrieved 12 May 2024 Sen Subramaniam amp Nelson 2008 p 212 Morin et al 2012 Free and Open Source Software FOSS Licensing O Regan 2022 p 394 O Regan 2022 p 396 Fagundes amp Perzanowski 2020 p 524 Davila 2015 p 6 Boyle 2003 p 45 O Regan 2022 pp 394 396 Larry Troan 2005 Open Source from a Proprietary Perspective PDF RedHat Summit 2006 Nashville redhat com p 10 Archived from the original PDF on 22 January 2014 Retrieved 29 December 2015 Terasaki 2013 p 469 Terasaki 2013 pp 469 470 Clohessy et al 2020 pp 40 41 Watt 2023 p 4 Dempsey amp Kelliher 2018 p 48 Dempsey amp Kelliher 2018 pp 48 57 Dempsey amp Kelliher 2018 pp 61 63 Dempsey amp Kelliher 2018 p 2 Corbett 2019 p 455 Kim 2016 pp 12 21 Bakos et al 2014 p 1 Ben Shahar amp Schneider 2014 p 68 Terasaki 2013 pp 485 486 Corbett 2019 pp 456 457 Morin et al 2012 Proprietary Licensing Carpenter 2023 pp 485 486 Ahuja 2016 p 381 Corbett 2019 p 456 Carpenter 2023 pp 480 481 Carpenter 2023 pp 481 482 Carpenter 2023 p 485 Carpenter 2023 pp 482 483 Carpenter 2023 p 478 Corbett 2019 p 460 Terasaki 2013 p 471 Oprysk amp Sein 2020 pp 620 621 Corbett 2019 p 461 O Regan 2022 pp 151 219 224 405 Qazi et al 2024 Performance evaluation parameters Rana amp Ziegler 2010 p 188 Qazi et al 2024 Conclusion Bernelin 2020 p 96 Sen Subramaniam amp Nelson 2008 p 209 Morin et al 2012 Open Source versus Closed Source Morin et al 2012 Permissive versus Copyleft Smith 2022 3 2 1 1 Sen Subramaniam amp Nelson 2008 pp 211 212 St Laurent 2004 pp 38 39 Davila 2015 p 5 Davila 2015 pp 5 6 Joy 2022 pp 990 992 Sen Subramaniam amp Nelson 2008 p 208 Alamoudi et al 2020 p 537 Bernelin 2020 p 94 Morin et al 2012 Compatibility Proliferation Fragmentation and Directionality Bernelin 2020 p 98 Bernelin 2020 pp 100 102 Ombredanne 2020 p 105 Ombredanne 2020 p 106 St Laurent 2004 pp 159 163 Smith 2022 3 3 Smith 2022 3 4 1 Smith 2022 p 106 St Laurent 2004 pp 158 159 Ballhausen 2022 p 127 Walden 2022 1 1 Smith 2022 3 4 2 Smith 2022 3 4 Butler et al 2022 p 1 Butler et al 2022 p 11152 Davila 2015 p 7 Zhou amp Choudhary 2022 p 731 August et al 2021 pp 1 2 August et al 2021 p 1 SourcesAhuja Neha 2016 Commercial Creations The Role of End User License Agreements in Controlling the Exploitation of User Generated Content John Marshall Review of Intellectual Property Law 16 381 410 Alamoudi Emad Mehmood Rashid Aljudaibi Wajdi Albeshri Aiiad Hasan Syed Hamid 2020 Open Source and Open Data Licenses in the Smart Infrastructure Era Review and License Selection Frameworks Smart Infrastructure and Applications Foundations for Smarter Cities and Societies Springer International Publishing pp 537 559 ISBN 978 3 030 13705 2 Anesa Patrizia 1 March 2014 Translating end user license agreements issues strategies and techniques ASp La revue du GERAS 65 65 87 102 doi 10 4000 asp 4205 ISSN 1246 8185 August Terrence Chen Wei Zhu Kevin 2021 Competition Among Proprietary and Open Source Software Firms The Role of Licensing in Strategic Contribution Management Science 67 5 3041 3066 doi 10 1287 mnsc 2020 3674 Bakos Yannis Marotta Wurgler Florencia Trossen David R 2014 Does Anyone Read the Fine Print Consumer Attention to Standard Form Contracts The Journal of Legal Studies 43 1 1 35 doi 10 1086 674424 Ballhausen Miriam 2022 Copyright Enforcement Open Source Law Policy and Practice Oxford University Press pp 126 140 ISBN 978 0 19 886234 5 Ben Shahar Omri Schneider Carl E 2014 More Than You Wanted to Know The Failure of Mandated Disclosure Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 16170 9 Bernelin Margo 2020 The compatibility of open free licences a legal imbroglio International Journal of Law and Information Technology 28 2 93 111 doi 10 1093 ijlit eaaa010 Boyle James 2003 The Second Enclosure Movement and the Construction of the Public Domain Law and Contemporary Problems 66 1 33 74 ISSN 0023 9186 Butler Simon Gamalielsson Jonas Lundell Bjorn Brax Christoffer Mattsson Anders Gustavsson Tomas Feist Jonas Kvarnstrom Bengt Lonroth Erik 2022 Considerations and challenges for the adoption of open source components in software intensive businesses Journal of Systems and Software 186 Elsevier BV 111152 doi 10 1016 j jss 2021 111152 ISSN 0164 1212 Carpenter Owen 2023 EULA or Eulogy Reckoning End User License Agreements and Near Future Cyborgs Health Matrix Journal of Law Medicine 33 467 498 Clohessy Trevor Acton Thomas Morgan Lorraine 2020 The SaaS Payoff Measuring the Business Value of Provisioning Software as a Service Technologies Measuring the Business Value of Cloud Computing Springer International Publishing pp 39 55 ISBN 978 3 030 43198 3 Corbett Susan 2019 Computer game licences The EULA and its discontents Computer Law amp Security Review 35 4 453 461 doi 10 1016 j clsr 2019 03 007 ISSN 0267 3649 Davila Jacinto 2015 The Political Logic of Free Libre Open Source Software Societal Benefits of Freely Accessible Technologies and Knowledge Resources IGI Global pp 1 24 ISBN 978 1 4666 8337 2 Dempsey David Kelliher Felicity 2018 Industry Trends in Cloud Computing Alternative Business to Business Revenue Models Springer International Publishing ISBN 978 3 319 87693 1 Fagundes Dave Perzanowski Aaron November 2020 Abandoning Copyright William amp Mary Law Review 62 2 487 569 Joy Reagan 2022 The Tragedy of the Creative Commons An Analysis of How Overlapping Intellectual Property Rights Undermine the Use of Permissive Licensing Case Western Reserve Law Review 72 4 977 1013 Kim Nancy S 2016 Wrap contracting and the online environment Causes and cures Research Handbook on Electronic Commerce Law Edward Elgar Publishing ISBN 978 1 78347 992 4 Langer Arthur M 2016 Guide to Software Development Designing and Managing the Life Cycle Springer ISBN 978 1 4471 6799 0 Morin Andrew Urban Jennifer Sliz Piotr 2012 A Quick Guide to Software Licensing for the Scientist Programmer PLOS Computational Biology 8 7 e1002598 Bibcode 2012PLSCB 8E2598M doi 10 1371 journal pcbi 1002598 ISSN 1553 7358 PMID 22844236 This article incorporates text available under the CC BY 4 0 license Ombredanne Philippe 2020 Free and Open Source Software License Compliance Tools for Software Composition Analysis Computer 53 10 105 109 doi 10 1109 MC 2020 3011082 Oprysk Liliia Sein Karin June 2020 Limitations in End User Licensing Agreements Is There a Lack of Conformity Under the New Digital Content Directive IIC International Review of Intellectual Property and Competition Law 51 5 594 623 doi 10 1007 s40319 020 00941 y O Regan Gerard 2022 Concise Guide to Software Engineering From Fundamentals to Application Methods Springer Nature ISBN 978 3 031 07816 3 Qazi Faiza Kwak Daehan Khan Fiaz Gul Ali Farman Khan Sami Ullah 2024 Service Level Agreement in cloud computing Taxonomy prospects and challenges Internet of Things 25 101126 doi 10 1016 j iot 2024 101126 ISSN 2542 6605 Rana Omer Ziegler Wolfgang 2010 Research Challenges in Managing and Using Service Level Agreements Grids P2P and Services Computing Springer ISBN 978 1 4419 6793 0 Sen Ravi Subramaniam Chandrasekar Nelson Matthew L 2008 Determinants of the Choice of Open Source Software License Journal of Management Information Systems 25 3 Informa UK Limited 207 240 doi 10 2753 mis0742 1222250306 ISSN 0742 1222 Smith P McCoy 20 October 2022 Copyright Contract and Licensing in Open Source Open Source Law Policy and Practice Oxford University PressOxford pp 71 112 doi 10 1093 oso 9780198862345 003 0003 ISBN 978 0 19 886234 5 St Laurent Andrew M 2004 Understanding Open Source and Free Software Licensing O Reilly Media ISBN 978 0596005818 Terasaki Michael 2013 Do End User License Agreements Bind Normal People Western State University Law Review 41 467 Walden Ian 20 October 2022 Open Source as Philosophy Methodology and Commerce Using Law with Attitude Open Source Law Policy and Practice Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 oso 9780198862345 003 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 886234 5 Watt Andy 2023 Building Modern SaaS Applications with C And NET Build Deploy and Maintain Professional SaaS Applications Packt ISBN 978 1 80461 087 9 Zhou Zach Zhizhong Choudhary Vidyanand 2022 Impact of Competition from Open Source Software on Proprietary Software Production and Operations Management 31 2 731 742 doi 10 1111 poms 13575 Further readingClassen H Ward 2022 The Practical Guide to Software Licensing and Cloud Computing American Bar Association ISBN 978 1 64105 750 9 External linksWikibooks has a book on the topic of FOSS Licensing