Home opinion-and-analysis Open Sauce Free code does have monetary value

Author's Opinion

The views in this column are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of iTWire.

Have your say and comment below.

Get all your tech news delivered to your mail box five days a week
iTWire UPDATE - it's FREE!


A case that ended over the weekend has set down an important precedent: the authors of free and open source software can lodge and win damages for copyright claims if someone uses their code without proper authorisation.

The case was brought by Robert Jacobsen, a software developer and member of the Java Model Railroad Interface Project, against Matthew Katzer of Kamind Associates.

Jacobsen and his fellow developers had created an application called DecoderPro which allows for the programming of processors to remotely control model trains.

Katzer offers a closed application, Decoder Commander, which can be used for the same purpose.

Jacobsen filed suit in 2006, claiming that Katzer had incorporated his (Jacobsen's) code into Decoder Commander after removing the copyright notices.

The question of merely winning the case was not that important as the fact that Jacobsen was also awarded damages - in the amount of $US100,000 - as it has established the precedent that free software coders can claim damages for such infringements.

It has set down the principle that even code which one can take freely and use has a value attached to it. Of course, when someone uses the code under the terms of its licence, there is no cause for any litigation.

The removal of the copyright notices was deemed an infringement of the US Digital Millennium Copyright Act. The case was decided in the northern district court of California.

RECRUITMENT & RETENTION REPORT 2013

HIRE OR FIRE? BUY OR BUILD

2013 is well underway and Australian companies need to know whether they should invest in IT skills training or pay a premium for the people they need.

If you want to know which choices are being made in your sector, what skills are hard to find, which sectors intend to hire or fire and where the IT spend is going, this free report is must have.

GET YOUR REPORT NOW

Sam Varghese

website statistics

A professional journalist with decades of experience, Sam for nine years used DOS and then Windows, which led him to start experimenting with GNU/Linux in 1998. Since then he has written widely about the use of both free and open source software, and the people behind the code. His personal blog is titled Irregular Expression.

Connect

http://bs.serving-sys.com/BurstingPipe/adServer.bs?cn=tf&c=19&mc=imp&pli=5460041&PluID=0&ord=[2000]&rtu=-1