Open Source Initiative approves European Union Public Licence (EUPL)
The Open Source Initiative (OSI), one of the principal advocacy organisations on open source software, has unanimously approved the European Union Public Licence (EUPL) version 1.1 as an open source licence.
Source: www.osor.eu, March 11, 2009
"This is very good news", commented Karel De Vriendt, head of the
European Commission's e-Government program (IDABC) that is responsible
for the development and maintenance of the open source licence. "OSI's
decision certifies that the EUPL
is 100 percent compliant with their definition of open source. This
will help to convince European public administrations which are
developing software for their e-Government systems, that the EUPL is a true open source licence."
Version 1.1 of the EUPL
was published by the European Commission on 9 January. The licence is
available in all official languages of the European Union, and all
these 22 linguistic versions have identical value. This means that
developers who want to use the licence can pick whichever language
version they prefer.
Proliferation
The
OSI is increasingly strict with new licences, to prevent licence
proliferation, says Martin Michlmayr, one the OSI board members. In an
interview with the German Linux Magazine Online last week, he said he
expects the EUPL to be of
true value. "For the first time we have a license available in all
European languages, valid everywhere and with all translations legally
scrutinised."
The EUPL is also compatible with the GNU Public License version 2 (GPLv2). Michlmayr: "If you combine EUPL
code with GPLv2 code, you can distribute the combination under the
terms of the GPL. Given the widespread adoption of GPLv2, that's a very
useful provision."