• Rentlar@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      This time last year OSI recommended that the CRA:

      …exclude all activities prior to commercial deployment of the software and … clearly ensure that responsibility for CE marks does not rest with any actor who is not a direct commercial beneficiary of deployment.

      That recommendation has been accepted and implemented, and the OSI is very grateful to the various experts who took the time to listen.

      My ELI5 version is: The European government were making a rule where software makers can be punished for not following European standards and need a special mark of compliance. Open source organizations argued that the standards shouldn’t be held against any group until a software is sold, and volunteer/non-profit groups shouldn’t have to follow the standard. The Parliament listened and implemented this change to the draft rule.

        • Rentlar@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          Good question. I don’t know the specifics but, that’s probably where the nuances of “commercial beneficiary of deployment” come into play and beyond the scope of my 5 year-old level explanation. I’d say probably not if it’s optional donations.

  • clever_banana@lemmy.today
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    1 year ago

    clearly ensure that responsibility for CE marks does not rest with any actor who is not a direct commercial beneficiary of deployment

    Does that apply to open source hardware? Like, can I make a crane that absolutely kills people due to mechanical errors in the design (unintentional) or a space heater that catches fire or a e-Bike that explodes someone’s nuts off and be ok?

      • clever_banana@lemmy.today
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        1 year ago

        I’m talking about designs. Like full CAD and step-by-step documentation.

        So someone else follows your designs, builds the thing, and dies. The reason tbey died is objectively due to a design flaw, not a mistske in building to spec. Does the EU make you legally liable?

        • Shimitar@feddit.it
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          1 year ago

          EU don’t, but you need to make sure about the country in which you operated the crane as each EU country has its own laws and EU directives are not laws.

          I doubt you can be held responsible in such a case unless you are a civil engineer enabled to publish such designs and you did so by stating that those designs are in fact good to go.

          If I build my own crane and die or, worse, kill somebody operating it I am the only one responsible even if my uncle told me how to do so.