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