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IPRJ. Halpern, Ed.
Internet-DraftSelf
Expires: January 14, 2009July 13, 2008


Advice to the Trustees of the IETF Trust on Rights to be Granted in IETF Documents
draft-ietf-ipr-outbound-rights-07

Status of this Memo

By submitting this Internet-Draft, each author represents that any applicable patent or other IPR claims of which he or she is aware have been or will be disclosed, and any of which he or she becomes aware will be disclosed, in accordance with Section 6 of BCP 79.

Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts.

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The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at http://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt.

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This Internet-Draft will expire on January 14, 2009.

Abstract

Contributors grant intellectual property rights to the IETF. The IETF Trust holds and manages those rights on behalf of the IETF. The Trustees of the IETF Trust are responsible for that management. This management includes granting the licenses to copy, implement and otherwise use IETF contributions, among them Internet-Drafts and RFCs. The Trustees of the IETF Trust accepts direction from the IETF regarding the rights to be granted. This document describes the desires of the IETF regarding outbound rights to be granted in IETF contributions.



Table of Contents

1.  Introduction
2.  Purpose in Granting Rights
3.  Powers and Authority
4.  Recommended Grants of Right to Copy
    4.1.  Rights Granted for Reproduction of RFCs
    4.2.  Rights Granted for Quoting from IETF Contributions
    4.3.  Rights Granted for Implementing based on IETF Contributions
    4.4.  Rights Granted for use of text from IETF Contributions
    4.5.  Additional Licenses for IETF Contributions
5.  IANA Considerations
6.  Security Considerations
7.  References
    7.1.  Normative References
    7.2.  Informative References
§  Author's Address
§  Intellectual Property and Copyright Statements




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1.  Introduction

Under the current operational and administrative structures, IETF intellectual property rights are vested in the IETF Trust administered by a board of trustees made up of the members of the IAOC [RFC4371] (Carpenter, B. and L. Lynch, “BCP 101 Update for IPR Trust,” January 2006.). This includes the right to make use of IETF contributions, as granted by contributors under the rules laid out in [InboundRights] (Bradner, S. and J. Contreras, “I-D.ietf-ipr-3978-incoming-09.txt,” 2006.). The Trustees of the IETF Trust are therefore responsible for defining the rights to copy granted by the IETF to people who wish to make use of the material in these documents.

For consistency and clarity, this document uses the same terminology laid out in [InboundRights] (Bradner, S. and J. Contreras, “I-D.ietf-ipr-3978-incoming-09.txt,” 2006.) and uses the same meanings as defined in that document.

The IETF Trust, by way of its Trustees, has indicated, as is consistent with the IETF structure, that it will respect the wishes of the IETF in regard to what these granted rights ought to be. It is therefore the IETF's responsibility to articulate those wishes. This document represents the wishes of the IETF regarding the rights granted to all users in regard to IETF contributions, until it is superseded.



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2.  Purpose in Granting Rights

In providing a description of the wishes of the IETF with regard to rights granted in RFCs, it is helpful to keep in mind the purpose of granting such rights.

The mission of the IETF is to produce documents that make the Internet work better (see [RFC3935] (Alvestrand, H., “A Mission Statement for the IETF,” October 2004.) for more details). These documents, when completed, are published as RFCs.

An important subclass of RFCs is standards describing protocols; for these, the primary value to the Internet is the ability of implementors to build solutions (products, software, etc) which interoperate using these standards. Hence, the IETF has a strong interest in seeing accurate, interoperable implementations of the material the IETF publishes. The IETF Trust grants rights to copy to people to make use of the text in the RFCs in order to encourage accurate and interoperable implementations.

As early implementations from Internet-Drafts make use of descriptions in those Internet-Drafts, similar desires apply to Internet-Drafts.

Similar considerations also apply to non-standard, non-protocol documents such as BCPs and informational documents; in this document, we recommend a common approach to the issue of right-to-use licenses for all IETF documents.

Previous documents regarding rights in IETF documents have included in the RFC text specific text to be used to achieve the stated goals. This has proved problematic. When problems are found with such text, even when the problem is not a change in intent, it is necessary to revise the RFC to fix the problem. At best this delays fixing legal issues which need prompt attention. As such, this document describes the IETF desires to the Trustees of the IETF Trust, but does not provide the specific legal wording to address the goals. The selection, and updating as necessary, of legal wording is left to the Trustees of the IETF Trust. Appeals of the actions of the Trustees of the IETF Trust are governed by other documents. As the Trustees are the members of the IAOC, the appeals procedure documented in BCP 101 (currently [RFC4371] (Carpenter, B. and L. Lynch, “BCP 101 Update for IPR Trust,” January 2006.)) is applicable.



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3.  Powers and Authority

As described in the introduction, and formally specified in [InboundRights] (Bradner, S. and J. Contreras, “I-D.ietf-ipr-3978-incoming-09.txt,” 2006.), the legal authority for determining and granting users rights to copy material in RFCs and other IETF contributions rests with the Trustees for the IETF Trust, which is made up of the members of the IAOC, as described in [RFC4071] (Austein, R. and B. Wijnen, “Structure of the IETF Administrative Support Activity (IASA),” April 2005.) and [RFC4371] (Carpenter, B. and L. Lynch, “BCP 101 Update for IPR Trust,” January 2006.). This document provides guidance to that body, based on the rough consensus of the IETF. The trustees of the IETF Trust have the authority and responsibility to determine the exact text insertions (or other mechanisms), if any, needed in Internet-Drafts, RFCs, and all IETF Contributions to meet these goals.

The rough consensus described in this document reflects the agreement of the IETF as of the IETF Last call, and the Trustees of the IETF Trust are to begin drafting license text and other materials to act on these instructions upon IESG approval of this document for RFC publication. Changes to the IETF documentation, and document policies themselves, take effect as determined by the Trustees of the IETF Trust.

This document does not specify what rights the IETF Trust receives from others in IETF contributions. That is left to another document ([InboundRights] (Bradner, S. and J. Contreras, “I-D.ietf-ipr-3978-incoming-09.txt,” 2006.)). While care has been taken the working group in developing this document, and care will be taken by the Trustees of the IETF Trust, to see that sufficient rights are granted to the IETF Trust in IETF contributions, it is also the case that the trust can not grant rights it has not or does not receive, and it is expected that policies will be in line with that fact. Similarly, the rights granted for pre-existing documents can not be expanded unless the holders of rights in those contributions choose to grant expanded rights. Nonetheless, to the degree it can, and without embarking on a massive effort, it is desirable if similar rights to those described below can be granted in older RFCs.



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4.  Recommended Grants of Right to Copy

The IETF grants rights to copy and modify parts of IETF contributions in order to meet the objectives described earlier. As such, different circumstances and different parts of documents may need different grants. This section contains subsections for each such different grant that is currently envisioned. Each section is intended to describe a particular usage, to describe how that usage is recognizable, and to provide guidance to the Trustees of the IETF Trust as to what rights the IETF would like to see granted in that circumstances, and what limitations should be put on such granting.

These recommendations for outgoing rights are structured around the assumptions documented in [InboundRights] (Bradner, S. and J. Contreras, “I-D.ietf-ipr-3978-incoming-09.txt,” 2006.). Thus, this document is about granting rights derived from those granted to the IETF Trust. The recommendations below are how those granted rights should in turn be passed on to others using IETF documents in ways and for purposes that fit with the goals of the IETF. This discussion is also separate from discussion of the rights the IETF itself requires in documents to do its job, as those are not "outbound" rights. It is expected that the rights granted to the IETF will be a superset of those copying rights we wish to grant to others.



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4.1.  Rights Granted for Reproduction of RFCs

It has long been IETF policy to encourage copying of RFCs in full. This permits wide dissemination of the material, without risking loss of context or meaning. The IETF wishes to continue to permit anyone to make full copies and translations of RFCs.



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4.2.  Rights Granted for Quoting from IETF Contributions

There is rough consensus that it is useful to permit the quoting without modification of excerpts from IETF Contributions. Such excerpts may be of any length and in any context. Translation of quotations is also to be permitted. All such quotations should be attributed properly to the IETF and the IETF contribution from which they are taken.



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4.3.  Rights Granted for Implementing based on IETF Contributions

IETF contributions often include components intended to be directly processed by a computer. Examples of these include ABNF definitions, XML Schemas, XML DTDs, XML RelaxNG definitions, tables of values, MIBs, ASN.1, or classical programming code. These are included in IETF contributions for clarity and precision in specification. It is clearly beneficial, when such items are included in IETF contributions, to permit the inclusion of such code components in products which implement the contribution. It has been pointed out that in several important contexts use of such code requires the ability to modify the code. One common example of this is simply the need to adapt code for use in specific contexts (languages, compilers, tool systems, etc.) Such use frequently requires some changes to the text of the code from the IETF contribution. Another example is that code included in open source products is frequently licensed to permit any and all of the code to be modified. Since we want this code included in such products, it follows that we need to permit such modification. While there has been discussion of restricting the rights to make such modifications in some way, the rough consensus of the IETF is that such restrictions are likely a bad idea, and are certainly very complex to define.

As such, the rough consensus is that the IETF Trust is to grant rights such that code components of IETF contributions can be extracted, modified, and used by anyone in any way desired. To enable the broadest possible extraction, modification and usage, the IETF Trust should avoid adding software license obligations beyond those already present in a contribution. The granted rights to extract, modify and use code should allow creation of derived works outside the IETF that may carry additional license obligations. As the IETF Trust can not grant rights it does not receive, the rights to extract, modify and use code described in this paragraph can not be granted in IETF contributions that are explicitly marked as not permitting derivative works.

While it is up to the Trustees of the IETF Trust to determine the best way of meeting this objective, two mechanisms are suggested here that are believed to be helpful in documenting the intended grant to readers and users of IETF contributions.

Firstly, the Trustees of the IETF Trust should maintain, in a suitable, easily accessible fashion, a list of common RFC components which will be considered to be code. To start, this list should include at least the items listed above. The Trustees of the IETF Trust will add to this list as they deems suitable or as it is directed by the IETF.

Additionally, the Trustees of the IETF Trust should define a textual representation to be included in an IETF contribution to indicate that a portion of the document is considered by the authors (and later the working group, and upon approval the IETF) to be code, and to be subject to the permissions granted to use code.



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4.4.  Rights Granted for use of text from IETF Contributions

There is no consensus at this time to permit the use of text from RFCs in contexts where the right to modify the text is required. The authors of IETF contributions may be able and willing to grant such rights independently of the rights they have granted to the IETF by making the contribution.



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4.5.  Additional Licenses for IETF Contributions

There have been contexts where the material in an IETF contribution is also available under other license terms. The IETF wishes to be able to include content which is available under such licenses. It is desirable to indicate in the IETF contribution that other licenses are available. It would be inappropriate and confusing if such additional licenses restricted the rights the IETF intends to grant in the content of RFCS.

However, the IETF does not wish to have IETF Contributions contain additional licenses, as that introduces a number of additional difficulties. Specifically, additional text in the document, and any additional license referred to by permitted additional text must not in any way restrict the rights the IETF intends to grant to others for using the contents of IETF contributions.

Authors of contributions retain all rights in their contributions. As such, an author may directly grant any rights they wish separately from what the IETF grants. However, a reader wishing to determine or make use of such grants will need to consult external sources of information, including possibly open source code and documents, or contact the author directly.



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5.  IANA Considerations

No values are assigned in this document, no registries are created, and there is no action assigned to the IANA by this document. One list (of kinds of code sections) is anticipated, to be created and maintained by the Trustees of the IETF Trust. It is up to the Trustees of the IETF Trust whether they create such a list and whether they choose to involve the IANA in maintaining that list.



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6.  Security Considerations

This document introduces no new security considerations. It is a process document about the IETFs IPR rights being granted to other people. While there may be attacks against the integrity or effectiveness of the IETF processes, this document does not address such issues.



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7.  References



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7.1. Normative References

[InboundRights] Bradner, S. and J. Contreras, “I-D.ietf-ipr-3978-incoming-09.txt,” 2006.


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7.2. Informative References

[RFC3935] Alvestrand, H., “A Mission Statement for the IETF,” BCP 95, RFC 3935, October 2004 (TXT).
[RFC4071] Austein, R. and B. Wijnen, “Structure of the IETF Administrative Support Activity (IASA),” BCP 101, RFC 4071, April 2005 (TXT).
[RFC4371] Carpenter, B. and L. Lynch, “BCP 101 Update for IPR Trust,” BCP 101, RFC 4371, January 2006 (TXT).


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Author's Address

  Joel M. Halpern (editor)
  Self
  P. O. Box 6049
  Leesburg, VA 20178
  US
Email:  jmh@joelhalpern.com


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Full Copyright Statement

Intellectual Property