diff --git a/dosp-survey.ltx b/dosp-survey.ltx index 5158a8221f6be685fe23b93a5ea3ab3bbcb5731b..f06f11eb24b51a4f983cb885ae1292529fc7b3cc 100644 --- a/dosp-survey.ltx +++ b/dosp-survey.ltx @@ -27,8 +27,8 @@ draft: true \otsfirstterm{Delayed Open Source Publication} (DOSP) is the practice of distributing or publicly deploying software under a proprietary -license at first, then subsequently --- and in a planned fashion --- -publishing that software release's source code under an open source +license at first, then subsequently and in a planned fashion +publishing that software's source code under an open source license.\footnote{Note that this definition deliberately does not include \foreignphrase{ad hoc} or improvisatory open source releases of formerly proprietary code. For example, the 1998 release of the @@ -39,7 +39,7 @@ license.\footnote{Note that this definition deliberately does not source publication is also an interesting topic, but a separate one.} -Software produces have practiced DOSP throughout the history of free +Software producers have practiced DOSP throughout the history of free and open source software.\footnote{We use the terms ``free software'' and ``open source software'' synonymously throughout this report.} However, surveying this phenomenon at a high level, from its