The contents of this page are currently under review and should not be considered final.
The openEHR specifications and their computable expressions are openly published and free to use for all categories of use, both commercial and non-commercial.Copyright and licenses are used to protect these artefacts for ongoing open and free use by the community.
From the IP point of view, there are the following kinds of artefact:
Artefacts of all of the above types produced by the Specification Program are copyrighted to the openEHR Foundation. This establishes the Foundation to be the owner of the 'moral rights' to the artefacts, on behalf of all the contributors, and for the safety of the user community.
The contributors to an artefact are recognised in an attribution section of the work. For documentary specifications, this is the revision history of every specification. For computable artefacts, this is the contributor's list section in the license block.
A standard license is attached to each artefact, explicitly defining rights for use. Without this, the definition of usage rights reverts directly to the copyright law of some jurisdiction, or one of the international copyright conventions.
The license assignments are as follows:
Artefact type |
License for use |
Comments |
---|---|---|
Specification document source files |
|
The use of the CC-BY-SA license allows for public sharing, republishing and forking of the specifications. This acts as a safeguard against subversion of the openEHR Foundation preventing the community using the specifications in a fair way. |
Specification document published files |
|
ibid |
Specification computable artefacts |
Computable artefacts are licensed in the same way as software, using the Apache license, which is widely accepted and industry friendly. |
|
Educational artefacts |
|
Educational artefacts are intended for wide use, and improvement, translation and re-use is encouraged. |