
On Tuesday, June 17, 2003, at 10:34 AM, Ethan Merritt wrote:
In article <20030609161925132-0700@cgl.ucsf.edu> you write:
The UCSF Resource for Biocomputing, Visualization, and Informatics is pleased to announce the newest release of UCSF Chimera, an interactive molecular modeling system. It is free to academic and non-profit users and is available for Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, IRIX, and Tru64 Unix. It can be downloaded from http://www.cgl.ucsf.edu/chimera
Chimera has the capabilities common to many molecular graphics programs, as well as a number of more unique features, including:
[snip]
- Extensibility as a design principle, allowing users to create custom modules without changing Chimera code.
This is unlikely to happen so long as Chimera is distributed with such a restrictive license.
The following 2 clauses pretty much kill my interest in developing any software to work with Chimera.
3 The Licensee agrees that any modifications or derivative works based on the Software are considered part of the Software and the Licensee hereby assigns all copyright in all such modifications and derivative works to the Regents.
4 The Licensee shall not disclose in any form either the delivered Software or any modifications or derivative works based on the Software to third parties without prior written authorization from the Regents.
This is a pity, since otherwise Chimera looks like an interesting target for integrating a number of graphics projects I am involved in.
I don't believe these clauses actually restrict your ownership or ability to redistribute modules/extensions you develop for Chimera. I believe they restrict your ability to modify/redistribute the Chimera source code itself. Extensions don't require modification of Chimera source code. Nonetheless, I have cc'ed this reply to the head of our lab, Tom Ferrin (tef@cgl.ucsf.edu), so he can hopefully confirm that what I have said is indeed the case. Certainly points 3 & 4 of the license could be explicitly clarified to _not_ restrict ownership/distribution of extensions. There are already two extensions being distributed by third parties (SSD: ssd.rbvi.ucsf.edu; ViewFeature: http://feature.stanford.edu/documentation.html) that I'm fairly certain did not require written authorization by the Regents.
Is there a forum in which we can request that these clauses be dropped from the license?
chimera-dev@cgl.ucsf.edu is used to handle concerns/questions of Chimera developers. I've cc'ed this reply there also. Sincerely, Eric Pettersen pett@cgl.ucsf.edu