LATimes Discovers UCITA 7
A couple of people pointed us to this good article summarizing UCITA. Will it do any good? Probably not. But we remain hopeful.
Nothing is rich but the inexhaustible wealth of nature. She shows us only surfaces, but she is a million fathoms deep. -- Ralph Waldo Emerson
Re:This Just Helps Open Source Thrive (Score:1)
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hmm... (Score:1)
UCITA also affects hardware... (Score:1)
I.E., a hardware manufacturer can specify that Software products M,S,F, and T, and hardware products I,N,T and C are the only software products that can be run with hardware P (versions I, II, and III). Furthermore, the hardware can be designed to fail (or cause software to fail) if it detects "unauthorized" software on the machine.
Re:This Just Helps Open Source Thrive (Score:2)
Under the provisions of the UCITA, it is possible for me to advertise my produst, call it 'Webinfinite 2.0', as the greatest thing since FORTRAN. I can proceed to label copies of 'Stoned-B', complete with an installer that disables your virus scanner, as WI 2.0. Under the terms of my newly enforcable shrinkwrap licence, not only can I extort fees form you for the ability to uninstall it, I can prevent you from talking about it under penalty of fine.
Or worse yet, I can give you a perfectly functional bit of UberSoft, and then remotly disable it later; I have chosen to change my pricing structure. What! Ddn't you read the licence? Yes, the one in 2 point mirror image! You don't own that software! Now pay up the $49.99 like a good sheep or we will forcefully remove said software. I'll warn you in advance though, we usually corrupt the partition table in the process, and according to the license that is within our right as owner of the software..
So, Mr. Sheep, what was your credit card number again?
Re:hmm... (Score:1)
This Just Helps Open Source Thrive (Score:1)
It not only will draw people to GPLed software, but software under the BSD License, Artisic License, LGPL and others as well. All of the licenses mentioned previously have no "We can take this software away from you if you do X" clause in them (to the best of my knowledge). I could care less what kind of restrictions Microsoft, Sun, HP and others could (or some might say "will") put on their operating systems and software. If individuals and companies want to purchase software with these horrid restrictions, let them. I ceritanly don't mind, it's their money being wasted, their risk of getting in trouble with the manufactuer (due to license violations) and their lawyers (or the individual) will have to work overtime to read through these licenses.
I'll choose the license and software that's better, and in the end that's what it's all about: choice.
For me, the choice is clear. Commercial software with a terrible and restrictive license or Open Source software with close to no restrictions? The conclusion isn't too hard to come to for me.
Re:This Just Helps Open Source Thrive (Score:1)
Read this [linuxtoday.com] for more.