Breathe In, Breathe Out: How open hardware licensing can help save the world

Auteurs-es

  • Jiri Svorc
  • Andrew Katz Moorcrofts LLP

Mots-clés :

Open source, open hardware, licensing, CERN, ventilator, medical equipment, accessibility, CERN-OHL

Résumé

As with any other open source field, there are countless far-reaching advantages in open hardware licensing, as opposed to its proprietary counterpart. This paper takes the example of a low-cost portable mechanical ventilator design and considers the effect of the application of the three different variants of the newly-released CERN Open Hardware Licence Version 2. This paper considers the importance of licensing, and demonstrates how open hardware licensing can facilitate efficient further development of a project, improve its safety and reliability, and encourage collaboration. Most importantly, open hardware licensing allows anyone to freely use, study, modify and distribute improvements to project design, and make, sell or otherwise distribute products made to that design, making it a cost-effective means of developing and deploying the device throughout the world, from the most developed to the most vulnerable territories. Finally, this paper argues that open hardware licensing also encourages economic activity whilst it protects third-party intellectual property rights.

Biographies de l'auteur-e

  • Jiri Svorc
    Jiri Svorc works with Moorcrofts LLP as a Technology & IP Paralegal, having previously worked with law firms in the Czech Republic, the Netherlands and Luxembourg as well as with the European Commission in Belgium. In various roles, he participated in advising businesses as well as public sector organisations on technology, intellectual property and commercial law matters as well as personal data protection and cyber security. Most notably, he has participated in cross-border technology transfers, and advised the largest global technology companies as well as developers of disruptive technologies. Jiri has a keen interest in open source software (he has written his postgraduate dissertation on using open source code in proprietary software), key specialisms of the Technology Team at Moorcrofts and rapidly expanding fields in the industry and has been working with Andrew Katz in this area. Jiri holds a postgraduate qualification from Queen Mary, University of London, has completed his legal practice exams, and plans to qualify as a solicitor.
  • Andrew Katz, Moorcrofts LLP
    Andrew Katz studied Natural Sciences and Law at Cambridge University where he graduated with honours in 1989. In 1991 he was called to the Bar, and in 1993 requalified as a solicitor. He moonlighted as a programmer during his studies at Bar School, programming in Turbo Pascal. In 1991 he became an accredited NeXT developer. He has released software under the GPL. He is currently a partner at Moorcrofts LLP, a boutique law firm in England's Thames Valley and advises a wide range of businesses on free and open source related issues. He has lectured and published widely on the subject.

Publié

2020-04-05

Numéro

Rubrique

Editorials

Comment citer

Breathe In, Breathe Out: How open hardware licensing can help save the world. (2020). Journal of Open Law, Technology & Society, 11(1), 49-56. https://jolts.world/index.php/jolts/article/view/139