An open letter to the corporate leadership of the SCA, lightly edited for clarity from the version I submitted in September 2022. — Mathghamhain
There is a long-standing issue within the Society around licensing for software developed by volunteers as well as related IT-related creations.
My direct experience with this is mostly in the context of the East Kingdom webministry, but in talking with folks from other kingdoms I’ve gotten the impression that this issue is widespread and dates back more than twenty years.
If you look at all the software written for various branches of the SCA — event calendars, order-of-precedence repositories, custom website themes, martial-authorization databases — I believe you will find that only a minority of it has clear copyright attributions or explicit licenses.
Most of the time this doesn’t really matter, but when I started asking about it a couple of years ago, I discovered that numerous kingdoms have their own horror story about a time some volunteer abruptly changed their mind and announced that the SCA could no longer use the code they’d developed and that the local group had come to rely on.
The situation is also a barrier to sharing code, and may contribute to the pattern of each kingdom “reinventing the wheel” — in the absence of written licenses, it’s difficult to publish code as open source or otherwise redistribute it within the Society or beyond.
As far as I can tell, there hasn’t ever been any direction from the Society level on this subject.
While this issue most obviously affects the webministry, it also appears elsewhere, such as when heralds or marshals create database applications.
When I drafted a proposed Society handbook on release forms last year, I included a short chapter on this subject, along with some proposed paperwork that could be used to memorialize license agreements in a simple way; I think this survived into the version of the handbook that was sent to the Board for review, but I am not sure what will eventually be published.
I think it’s important to support a range of options for licensing rather than insisting that everything follow a single model — only some projects can be made into open source, only some developers will transfer all rights to the Society, etc — so it’s useful to have a couple of approaches that people can pick from while remaining confident that all of them protect the Society’s interests.
- For greenfield projects that are being started now, approaching the entire effort as an open source project is a great way of addressing this issue, as most techie people are accustomed to this way of working, and open source licensing means that nobody can later insist that the Society stop using a piece of code.
- In cases where open source doesn’t seem appropriate, we could ask contributors to sign a one-page agreement giving the Society an irrevocable license to use their work.
- Given that we’re not paying people, I’m not fond of asking volunteers to sign “work for hire”-style contracts that transfer copyrights and assign all interests in perpetuity to the Society — I for one would be disinclined to sign such an agreement — but some people might be comfortable with that approach.
I’ve put together a proposed template for such agreements below.
(For the record, I am not a lawyer, and this is not professional legal advice — it’s just my opinion based on three decades of experience negotiating commercial software development contracts.)
I hope this is of use to you. I’m glad to answer any questions you might have.
In service to the dream,
— Mathghamhain Ua Ruadháin
This is great! How can we help get this formalized?
I submitted this proposal to the SCA’s Manager of Information Technology in late September, and in late October I was told that it had been passed along to the SCA’s President.
To date, my experience with trying to communicate directly with anyone at the executive or board levels of the SCA has been incredibly frustrating, and I don’t know what else I can do to help move this along, but I’m open to suggestions!