Thread (5 messages) 5 messages, 3 authors, 2025-10-17

Re: Signed-off-by & the law

From: "Theodore Ts'o" <tytso@mit.edu>
Date: 2025-10-17 04:18:55

On Thu, Oct 16, 2025 at 02:29:39PM -0700, Collin Funk wrote:
I think this section from an article written by the FSF addresses your
concern [1]:

    Some developers worry that assigning copyright will strip them of
    all their rights to the code they've created. To address this, the
    FSF includes a "license grantback" to the developer in the agreement
    contract. For the developer, a license grantback means they can
    continue to modify and share their code, and technically, they could
    even distribute their software under a different license. In other
    words, by assigning copyright to the FSF, the developer does not
    give up any of these sorts of rights.
That's not the only concern.  The reason why I have chosen to never to
sign an FSF Copyright Assignment is the following:

  "I hereby indemnify and hold harmless the Foundation, its officers,
  employees, and agents against any and all claims, actions or damages
  (including attorney's reasonable fees)...."

If you ever see the word "indemnify" in a legal document that someone
asks you to sign, I strongly suggest that you first talk to a lawyer
to understand what this might mean.  Speaking for myself, if I were to
give the FSF my intellectual output, under NO circumstances would I be
willing to risk my assets, my house, etc. on an indemnification
guarantee.

In any case, as I mentioned in my comment to Ben's Law Stack Exchange
answer, before the DCO was drafted for the Linux Kernel's
SubmittingPatches process documentation, it was vetted by lawyers at
the Linux Foundation and various LF Member Companies.  Those lawyers
certainly viewed the DCO as being legally useful.

	  	     	    	  	  - Ted

P.S.  The FSF has gotten more flexible over time; when I first got
involved with FOSS, the FSF required copyright assignments, and so I
didn't contribute to FSF projects.  Perhaps because enough people,
including large companies, have said "no way, Jose", the FSF will now
accept copyright disclimers, or even unlimited perpetual copyright
licenses.  More recently, they've even said that limited number of
code contributions with a DCO might be acceptable[1].

[1] https://www.fsf.org/blogs/licensing/FSF-copyright-handling
Keyboard shortcuts
hback out one level
jnext message in thread
kprevious message in thread
ldrill in
Escclose help / fold thread tree
?toggle this help