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- Date: Thu, 11 Mar 93 15:08:26 CST
- Message-Id: <9303112108.AA10984@boombox.micro.umn.edu>
- Received: from rawBits.micro.umn.edu by boombox.micro.umn.edu; Thu, 11 Mar 93 15:08:26 CST
- From: "The Minnesota Gopher Team" <gopher>
- To: pacs-l@uhupvm1.uh.edu, review@msen.com, com-priv@uu.psi.com, gopher-news
- Subject: University of Minnesota Gopher software licensing policy.
-
- In the best of USENET tradition there has been a lot of hysteria,
- misinformation, and rumor floating around that this note is being
- written to address. Please treat this as an "official" University
- of Minnesota Gopher Team position. We'll put this document up so
- that anyone can get a copy before they howl.
-
- In a time where we are having budgets slashed, it is impossible
- to justify continued (increasing) resources being allocated to
- Gopher development unless some good things result for
- the University of Minnesota. This is a fact of life.
-
- We can make a case that if you put up a gopher server that
- makes useful information available to the Internet, then there
- is more useful information available to the University of
- Minnesota academic community also. Hence this is a Good Thing.
-
- If on the other hand you put up a gopher server that is
- commercial in nature and either inaccessible to the world or
- containing information whose primary purpose is to MAKE YOU
- MONEY, then we have a hard time making a case for our
- admistrators supporting this. Indeed if you look at this
- honestly, a licence fee is the right and proper thing to do.
-
- Remember when UNIX was given away free?
- How many of you are using UNIX now? It is licensed.
-
- First, in the case of gopher servers run by higher education
- or non-profit organizations offering information freely
- accessible to the Internet, there is no change. No fees.
- They just continue to use Gopher like they have always
- done. If you fall under this category, please stop
- and think about it. Nothing's changed.
-
- In the case where gopher servers are being used internally
- by commercial entities we think a license fee is right.
- We don't know what amount of a fee is reasonable: so YOU
- have to tell us and we need to negotiate on a case by case
- basis. What is loose change for a large corporation may
- be prohibitive for a small business. We'd like some
- kind of sliding scale.
-
- In the case of gopher servers offering information that is
- sold, again we think a fee is reasonable and further that
- it be some small fraction of your sales. Once more, we
- need to negotiate a reasonable fraction on a case by case
- basis. So comparing YOUR agreement with the one we make
- with the guy next door might not be a fruitful thing to do.
-
- Finally, there is the grey area where information on a
- server run by a commercial entity is accessible to all.
- Now having price-lists of your products (for example)
- available, really is a direct benefit to you. On the
- other hand, while having usefully compiled lists or indexed
- journals may well be an indirect benefit to you (folks
- will think well of your company and services) they have
- a direct benefit to everyone. In these cases, we'd like
- YOU to make a case arguing that the material on your
- server falls into the second category, enabling us to
- give you a license without a fee.
-
- Yes, it may seem unfair that we get to decide whether
- your commercial server should be given a license to use
- our software without a charge.... but there it is.
-
- We are not out to make big money here. We are simply
- facing the realities of our environment and having to
- justify how we spend OUR resources also.
-
- The Internet Gopher protocol is documented and we're
- also just about done with an informational RFC.
- Folks can and have written clients and servers for
- Gopher. You can also do it.
-
- Before you go off and flame once more, ask yourself if
- you want to get YOUR particular server going with as
- little fuss and expense as possible... or if you just
- want to stir up the soup. Then do what you wish.
- We want to keep things working for all of you, and get
- ourselves the okays from above to keep doing that.
-
- If you want to be productive, talk to Shih Pau Yen;
- he's the one with the power to do the deals. He
- can be reached at
- yen@boombox.micro.umn.edu
- or (612) 624-8865
-
- Please don't abuse the Gopher Development team :-)
-
- - Yen and the Minnesota Gopher Team
-
-