The line in the sand is
Its The Law.
US pipeline design must comply to the Code of Federal Regulations, Title 49 Parts 192 and 194, which in turn were based on ASME Pipeline design codes ASME B31.4 and ASME B31.8. 2008 Editions. ASME codes are developed by panel members drawn from member engineers working in and for the pipeline industry companies. These companies provide support, because they recognize the many benefits of doing so.
ASME has reissued updated versions of each of these codes several times since 2008, but the use of the updated versions is not required by US law, as it was only the 2008 editions that were incorporated into US law and US GOV makes available, free to all, the CFRs. The problem has always been the additional documents and specifications that only appear in the CFRs as references. Some are available, but many are not. This ruling, hopefully, will solve that problem.
How can anybody ensure that they follow the law if, for whatever reason, the law, or portions thereof, are not available as public knowledge? How can anyone follow the law, if the law is effectively secret?
If any Org does not want to freely provide any of their work that becomes law, they should not try so hard to get it written into the law, which many apparently view as a solid gold business model. They could instead adopt the open source software model, make the software free, solicit sponsorships, or outright donations, incorporate advertising, or peddle their consulting services, or user manuals and associated educational materials to help users operate the software effectively, or sell enhancements that make the basic version 1000 x easier to use. Make the law free and sell your "value added". It would seem not too far fetched to believe that various valve, pipe, fitting, pump, compressor manufacturers would be willing to develop material and equipment specs, if given the appropriate formum to do so. ASME could consider giving me the 2008 editions free, then charging me extra for access to all the versions that came after. It could be that we just need to exploit our already available resources more effectively. It also seems like that's what's going on anyway. They make some common agreements amongst all manufacturers, then they get some org to put a number on it and sell it to us for extra revenue. But even that's fine. I'm OK with it, at least up till when it becomes a law.and we have to use it. That's the line we cant cross. If I have alternatives, I'm OK with it, but I do need to know how to make something legal, or know when I'm running afoul. Besides, most consultants make their money on value added services. All the CFRs are public knowledge. Anyone can access them, but it's only us experts that really know how to turn them into practical designs, or airline operating plans, or the tax accountants that can save you from paying gov more money then they charge for filing your taxes for you. Anyone can read the Pipeline CFRs, but not everyone can make a working pipeline system out of what those say. That's what I sell; The value that (only) I can add. If I cannot save my customers more than I charge, or cannot deliver them better value then what other bidders offer, I don't get involved.
Finally. I don't bill 100% of my work. This website is ample evidence of that. A certain amount of "give back to the community" helps us all. Why should I have to pay 100%. Or must everything be a zero sum game?
What is painfully obvious is that secret laws cannot possibly accomplish their objectives, unless those objectives are nefarious.
--Einstein gave the same test to students every year. When asked why he would do something like that, "Because the answers had changed."