Re: Cherokee Nation Posts Open Source Legisation - Invites commentsfrom Community Members

From: christos gentsis
Date: Wed Jan 12 2005 - 02:03:57 EST


Valdis.Kletnieks@xxxxxx wrote:
On Thu, 06 Jan 2005 12:37:25 CST, root said:


It's based on the design of the license. Under Cherokee Nation Law, you
can have and claim trade secrets in public code released under a public
license. This makes it very easy for individual contributors to enforce their rights in the US. We spent months researching this, and yes,
it holds up under our laws.


You will have trouble with "rights in the US", because of the definition of
"trade secret" includes 18 USC 1839 (3):

(3) the term "trade secret" means all forms and types of financial,
business, scientific, technical, economic, or engineering information,
including patterns, plans, compilations, program devices, formulas, designs,
prototypes, methods, techniques, processes, procedures, programs, or codes,
whether tangible or intangible, and whether or how stored, compiled, or
memorialized physically, electronically, graphically, photographically, or in
writing if --

(A) the owner thereof has taken reasonable measures to keep such information secret; and

(B) the information derives independent economic value, actual or potential,
from not being generally known to, and not being readily ascertainable through
proper means by, the public; and

You'll have a hard time convincing a jury not on the reservation that publishing
something as open source is at all a "reasonable measure to keep it secret".

In fact, you're going to have a hard time - if you're not a sovereign nation,
then 18 USC 1839 will trump your law. And if you *are* a sovereign nation,
you better get some lobbyists that can read and understand the implications
of 19 USC 2242(a)(1)(A) and/or 19 USC 2242(b)(1).....

hello all

sorry about this question but i didn't understand something in all this "trade secret" situation...

first: Is there any impact in GNU GPL?

second: does this US law means that everything could be a "trade secret"? even something like the GUI? or a process bar? and in case that someone will register them what is going to happens?

third: this under US law, is it applied in EU etc????

thanks for your time
Christos



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