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{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2017}}
{{Notability|date=October 2013}}
 
Post Open (for Post Open Source) is a proposed successor to the [[Open source|Open Source]] software paradigm, originated by [[Bruce Perens]], the creator of the [[Open Source Definition]] and co-founder of the [[Open Source Initiative]]. It is promoted at the web site [https://PostOpen.org/ PostOpen.org]

'''Post open source''', also called "post open-source software (POSS)", iswas a 2012/2013 noticed movement<ref>[https://opensource.com/business/14/8/interview-michael-tiemann-red-hat How to think like open source pioneer] by Michael Tiemann (5 Aug 2014)</ref><ref name="infoworld" /> among [[software developer]]s, in particular [[open-source software]] developers. The interpretation was that this iswas a reaction to the complex compliance requirements of the [[software license]]/[[permission culture]], noticed by more code being posted into repositories without any license whatsoever, implying a disregard for the current license regimes, including [[copyleft]] as supporter of the current [[copyright]] system ("[[Copyright reform movement]]").
 
==History==
"POSS" was first used by James Governor, founder of analyst firm RedMonk, who said<ref>{{cite web|url=https://twitter.com/monkchips/status/247584170967175169|title=Dai Jesting|work=Twitter}}</ref> ''"younger devs today are about POSS – Post open-source software. fuck the license and governance, just commit to github."''<ref name="infoworld">{{cite web|url=http://www.infoworld.com/d/open-source-software/github-needs-take-open-source-seriously-208046 |title=GitHub needs to take open source seriously |author=Simon Phipps|publisher=Infoworld|date=30 November 2012|accessdate=30 January 2013}}</ref> According to [[Luis Villa]], when even ''"...the open license ecosystem assumes that sharing can't (or even shouldn't) happen without explicit permission in the form of licenses"'', developers vote their dissent through POSS.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://tieguy.org/blog/2013/01/27/taking-post-open-source-seriously-as-a-statement-about-copyright-law/ |title=Pushing back against licensing and the permission culture |publisher=tieguy.org|author=[[Luis Villa]]|year=2013}}</ref> This was mostly ineffective, since the default in international copyright law is "all rights reserved", and some dedication to the public ___domain or license is necessary if the software is to be shared with the public without legal ambiguity.
 
== Precursor ==
In 2004 [[Daniel J. Bernstein]] pushed a similar idea with his [[License-free software]], where he neither placed his software ([[qmail]], [[djbdns]], [[daemontools]], and [[ucspi-tcp]]) into [[public ___domain]] nor released it with a [[software license]].<ref>[httphttps://web.archive.org/web/20040622043020/http://qmail.org/not-open-source.html "qmail is not open source"] – an article published by Russell Nelson, OSI board member in 2004</ref> But, with end of 2007 he dedicated his software in the [[public ___domain]] with an explicit waiver statement.<ref>{{cite web
|year=2007
|url=http://cr.yp.to/distributors.html