Over at the Meshed Insights blog, Simon Phipps writes about why the public domain falls short and more detailed licensing is needed in order to extend rights to a software community.
Yes, public domain may give you the rights you need. But in an open source project, it's not enough for you to determine you personally have the rights you need. In order to function, every user and contributor of the project needs prior confidence they can use, improve and share the code, regardless of their location or the use to which they put it. That confidence also has to extend to their colleagues, customers and community as well.
Source : The Universal Donor
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday January 18 2018, @03:37PM
Indeed you cannot stop individual developers from being uncooperative and closing your source, particularly if you are unwilling to sue them.