Michigan Diagnostic Software Case Big Win for GPL 307
Pig Hogger writes "Many people claim that the validity of the GNU Public License has not been tested in court in the US. Well, it just had been, in Michigan, in a case that validated open-source car diagnostic software against the pretension of automakers who want to keep it secret. But don't take my word for it; read the story on GROKLAW." It's actually the Society of Automotive Engineers involved here; DrewTech (the developers in this case) nicely donated half of their settlement money to the SAE.
Good. (Score:5, Informative)
Since the provisions of the GPL have been upheld in a case in Germany as well [boingboing.net], maybe PearPC [sf.net] will be able to more easily defend itself against CherryOS [cherryos.com], which has blatantly taken GPL code, without release of source code or attribution, from PearPC and several other GPL projects:
eWeek has a general overview of the situation:
http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1759,1775386,00.a
Below is a comprehensive collection of evidence, which runs the gamut from CherryOS including original PearPC graphics, extremely unique strings and error messages, debug code from PearPC, the same unique MAC address as PearPC's default network adapter, shared specific functionality, including bugs, and so on:
http://www.ht-technology.com/cherryos-pearpc/cher
http://www.drunkenblog.com/drunkenblog-archives/0
http://www.drunkenblog.com/drunkenblog-archives/0
http://www.drunkenblog.com/drunkenblog-archives/0
http://www.drunkenblog.com/drunkenblog-archives/0
http://starport.dnsalias.net/index.php?show=artic
http://forums.pearpc.net/viewtopic.php?p=16178#16
http://www.tliquest.net/ryan/cherryos/ [tliquest.net]
http://dhost.info/kourge/en/projects/frauds/cherr
Additionally, PearPC project authors are already asserting their rights under the GPL:
http://sourceforge.net/mailarchive/message.php?ms
And a general compilation of some of the evidence so far against CherryOS:
http://sourceforge.net/mailarchive/message.php?ms
Okay, now it's official (slightly off-topic) (Score:2, Insightful)
If you use intellectual property and copyright law to defend the GPL and go after infringers, then there is nothing wrong with the RIAA protecting its intellectual property using copyright law and going after infringers.
Re:Okay, now it's official (slightly off-topic) (Score:2)
And I'm at least consistent [slashdot.org] in [slashdot.org] my [slashdot.org] views [slashdot.org] here [slashdot.org]...
By the way, I was glad to see your reference to A Measure of Media Bias [ucla.edu] recently.
But then, most people are equally hypocritical and willfully ignorant in that realm as well.
Re:Okay, now it's official (slightly off-topic) (Score:5, Insightful)
In fact, one might reasonably argue that copyright law should be altered to always allow personal use, in which case using copyright to protect against GPL infringement would be covered, while the RIAA suing their customers wouldn't. More to the point, almost all "fair use" falls into the category of "personal use", and most "personal use" has historically fallen under "fair use". The Audio Home Recording Act essentially set that as the standard when it came to infringement, so it isn't really as unreasonable as it sounds.
As for myself, I could go either way on the issue of personal use. However, I don't think that's what the RIAA suits are really about. I think that in those suits, copyright is essentially being used as a sledgehammer to stifle potential competition. By painting P2P in such a negative light, they reduce the effectiveness of P2P technology and the internet as a whole at allowing unsigned artists to be heard---something that the recording industry desperately wants to avoid, as it significantly weakens the relevance of their role as gatekeeper....
Sometimes coins have more than just two sides.
Re:Okay, now it's official (slightly off-topic) (Score:2)
What use is there for novels other than "personal use"? Most copyrighted material is intended solely for "personal use". Why does it make sense for copyright not to be valid for "personal use"? Doesn't that circumvent the entire purpose of copyright, if I can copy anything I want to just because I'm going to use it? And my friend, because he's going to use it. And then his friend, because that's personal use, too....
Re:Okay, now it's official (slightly off-topic) (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Okay, now it's official (slightly off-topic) (Score:2)
So would be an attempt to create a legal loophole for P2P? Pretty thinly veiled.
Re:Okay, now it's official (slightly off-topic) (Score:3, Insightful)
The OP's argument, that because the GPL rests on copyright law, the music industry's use of copyright law is right, is absurd. Copyright law was made to curtail the rights of publishers, and protect the rights of consumers. Now that we are all publishers and consumers, it can change to fit the new model. The fact remains that re-publishing for profit is different than sharing, even if said 'sharing' can amount to thousands of c
Re:Okay, now it's official (slightly off-topic) (Score:3, Informative)
80. (1) Subject to subsection (2), the act of reproducing all or any substantial part of (a) a musical work embodied in a sound recording, (b) a performer's performance of a musical work embodied in a sound recording, or(br> (c) a sound recording in which a musical work, or a performer's performance of a musical work, is embodied onto an audio recording medium for the private use of the person who makes the copy does not constitute an infringement of the copyright in
Re:Okay, now it's official (slightly off-topic) (Score:3, Insightful)
How did you get that recording? Was the person who gave it to you allowed to do so?
You still need to have a license for the recording before you copied it.
Re:Okay, now it's official (slightly off-topic) (Score:2)
How is u
Re:Okay, now it's official (slightly off-topic) (Score:2)
Absolutely. Of course we would all be better off if copyright granted no rights and took no rights away. Rather if it were reduced to requiring that the anything distributed for profit have a copy sent to the library of congress FIRST and be made publically available by the library for period of 50yrs, 5yrs after submission.
This would mostly elim
Re:Okay, now it's official (slightly off-topic) (Score:2)
Copyright has always been the only way to protect the ownership of GPL code. This is not new.
people can no longer in the next breath defend copyright infringement on P2P networks.
Why not? Sure I can defend it. Just watch me. I won't go into detail. I'm sure plenty of others will.
GPL also wasn't the issue - but proved a good tool (Score:4, Interesting)
Also: As I read it GPL wasn't strictly at issue here. The core issue was whether a standards organization can claim IP rights over the standard itself when that standard is embodied as code. Once that issue was clearly articulated both parties seemed to take the enforcability of the terms of the GPL as a given.
What is important here is that it was the terms of the GPL that allwed Drew Technologies to haul the SAE into court, claim damages from them, and get them to settle WITH a payment of damages.
The SAE had posted Drew Tech's code, claiming they owned the copyright because it was derivitive of the standard and demanding a "subscription fee" from both Drew Tech and from all other users of Drew Tech's GPLed code.
The GPL violation was the hook Drew Tech chose to file a takedown demand, drag the SAE into court, and demand damages for violation of THEIR copyrights - like any other GPL software provider. B-)
Even in the absense of an actual decision, this case shows that licensing your code under the GPL doesn't jepoardize your ability to haul offenders into court and claim (and get settlements for) damages for violating your license terms.
Re:GPL also wasn't the issue - but proved a good t (Score:2)
In fact it may enhance this ability, by lowering the threshod for claiming damages.
Re:GPL also wasn't the issue - but proved a good t (Score:2)
DrewTech? (Score:2, Funny)
Not a win, but a settlement (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Not a win, but a settlement (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Not a win, but a settlement (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't think the GPL can declare any court victories until a judge actually rules in it's favor.
It is good to see that the SAE came to their senses, though.
Jerry
http://www.syslog.org/ [syslog.org]
Re:Not a win, but a settlement (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Not a win, but a settlement (Score:4, Interesting)
As an example, Microsoft's OEM contracts were widely accepted. That didn't mean they were legal.
Re:Not a win, but a settlement (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Not a win, but a settlement (Score:2)
Re:Not a win, but a settlement (Score:2)
After taking a long hard look at the "One smoking crater" the SCO case has been so far, I think the wise laywer will ever so strongly recommend that they too settle and be done with it.
Better a slap on the wrist with a settlement than being HBS case study in self destruction.
Re:Not a win, but a settlement (Score:3, Insightful)
In any event, the article submitter (and Groklaw) claim this is a test of the GPL in court. It's not. There was no ruling.
Re:Not a win, but a settlement (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Not a win, but a settlement (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Not a win, but a settlement (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Not a win, but a settlement (Score:2)
It's talking about whether deriving a program from a published standard constitutes a derived work of the standard or not.. copyright law, and the judge, said no.
This may even be bad for the GPL - the FSF are big on how everything is a derived work of everything else, and asserting that there are limits to that starts to chip away at their interpretation.
Re:Not a win, but a settlement (Score:2, Informative)
It's talking about whether deriving a program from a published standard constitutes a derived work of the standard or not.. copyright law, and the judge, said no.
Please read TFA. The plaintiff disagrees that the GPL is irrelevant. In fact, it's very relevant--the fact that the code in question was released under the GPL, and therefore not SAE's exclusive property, was one of the plaintiff's major claims.
Most GPL issues ARE copy
Re:Not a win, but a settlement (Score:3, Insightful)
However, that would be true of ANY license -- there's nothing about the claims of the GPL that are unique to this case. If they had released it under a commercial license, it would have been the same argument, just on a more limitted scale. The terms of the GPL
Re:Not a win, but a settlement (Score:3, Insightful)
Whether licenses add rights or take them away depends on your perspective.
Certainly licensing software under the GPL is more restrictive than releasing it in the public domain just as releasing binary code with a typical EULA is more restrictive than allowing people to copy it freely.
On the other hand, people don't have the automatic right to distribute source or binary, so you could say that both the GPL a
Re:Not a win, but a settlement (Score:4, Informative)
Incorrect. It depends simply on copyright law. The GPL takes away NO FREEDOMS that are given by default by copyright law. Instead, it adds to them.
"On the other hand, people don't have the automatic right to distribute source or binary, so you could say that both the GPL and an EULA add rights."
Incorrect. EULA's don't generally give you a right to distribute source or binary. If you know of one that does, give me a holler.
By default, copyright allows you to (a) use your program for any purpose, (b) learn from it, (c) modify it for yourself, and (d) keep an archival copy. Most EULA's restrict (b) and (c). The GPL adds additional rights. That is why it is unique. If you know of an EULA from a major vendor that adds additional rights that normal copyright wouldn't give you, let me know.
Re:Not a win, but a settlement (Score:2)
Again, copyright law may be at the core of the GPL but it's not relevent to everything. If code is given to the public domain, copyright is irrelevent. Thus the maximum rights an author can give you to his code is through releasing it in the public domain. Chosing the GPL means you wish to restrict rights relative to the rights you could grant through the publ
Re:Not a win, but a settlement (Score:3, Informative)
That is incorrect. The sale gives you that right. The EULA is a post-sale contract. Music does not include an EULA, yet it is covered by copyright. EULA's does not give you any right you did not already receive by paying money to legitimate channels.
Re:Not a win, but a settlement (Score:2)
Well, it would if the company were to sell it to you on those terms. They could also sell it to you as a public domain item (although you probably wouldn't buy it). As I said before, not every right or transaction automatically involves copyright and copyright alone.
The bottom line is that neither the GPL nor EULA's give third parties the maximum rights they could get through public domain or the BSD license. To me that is much more important then the somewhat artificial ar
Re:Not a win, but a settlement (Score:3, Informative)
True, but that has nothing to do with anything we are talking about.
"To me that is much more important then the somewhat artificial argument about adding or subtracting rights."
No, if you look at the subject we were actually talking about, it was whether or not the GPL is enforceable in court. The answer is yes, because it ADDS rights instead of taking them a
Re:Not a win, but a settlement (Score:3, Informative)
The rights terminated by the EULA.
Re:Not a win, but a settlement (Score:2)
After all, you can GPL rather than open to the public domain (as many choose to do for good reason) but you can NOT GPL something in the public domain.
Re:Not a win, but a settlement (Score:2)
It also takes away your right to link with the code unless you also GPL all your code - which is a freedom I have already (and not covered by copyright law as copy!=link).
Re:Not a win, but a settlement (Score:3, Informative)
That is incorrect. As a user, you could do this.
Re:Not a win, but a settlement (Score:2)
No it does not. Or rather, this is not established and your argument is not logical.
If linked code is derivative than you do NOT have a legal right to link to copyrighted code. If Linked code is NOT derivative than the GPL does not apply.
Personally, I have never heard a legitimate argument to support the linking issue and find it hill
Re:Not a win, but a settlement (Score:2)
Re:Not a win, but a settlement (Score:2)
In all cases the GPL grants rights because the GPL can only be applied to copyrighted code. You can't GPL code which is in the public domain.
Re:Not a win, but a settlement (Score:2, Insightful)
Suing for damages? Inappropriate, IMHO (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Suing for damages? Inappropriate, IMHO (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Suing for damages? Inappropriate, IMHO (Score:2, Interesting)
How would you offset the costs of determining if some code has been stolen, as well as the lawyer/court fees in order to prove it before a judge?
Re:Suing for damages? Inappropriate, IMHO (Score:2, Insightful)
Iow, you want the government to give you an equal opportunity to make all of the potential sales you can over somebody else's right to do what they want with their purchased property, their computer. Not only are you for affirmative action (ie equal opportunity) but also for taking away real, personal rights over physical property away in favor of virtual, potential righ
Re:Suing for damages? Inappropriate, IMHO (Score:3, Insightful)
You are confusing terms, though. You are using the word "stolen" which implies that you no longer have said item. "Unauthorized copying" more accurately describes the offense, not "stealing". Your examples show that you are confused as to the differences as well.
Making un
Re:Suing for damages? Inappropriate, IMHO (Score:2, Interesting)
You wrongly assume that a developer interested in the functionality you are selling would buy it rather then code it themselves.
Just like in the music world; if people MUST pay to listen to something and thats the ONLY way to hear it, alot of people would just opt not to hear it. How is that a lost sale?
Re:Suing for damages? Inappropriate, IMHO (Score:3, Insightful)
Circular reasoning.
You might say that you have rights to your intellectual property. Other people disagree. Fortunately (for you), for now, the courts agree with you. Don't confuse that with a natural right.
I don't agree that depriving you of a potential sale is, in any way, theft. Would I be stealing from you if I told your pote
Re:Suing for damages? Inappropriate, IMHO (Score:2)
This bears much more resemblance to the SCO case than to any swap kiddie.
Re:Suing for damages? Inappropriate, IMHO (Score:2)
You claim taking my code does not deprive me of property.
NO - listen to what people are saying. They're saying that "copying" and "taking" are two different things. "taking" implies a transfer of a single object - wrong for TWO reaons - one being that a person got the fruits of your labor without your permission, and another, totally unrelated reason, being that you had you've been deprived of your property unfairly. So "taking" implies the dual problem of freeloading AND deprivation of your property.
Re:Suing for damages? Inappropriate, IMHO (Score:3, Insightful)
Besides that, why shouldn't the author's seek monetary damages??? It costs them money to go to court and to force the violator to quit infringing on their rights.
What is in the community spirit of the GPL is something that will help ensure that future violations do not occur. Playing hardball will help that happen. Being "nice" about it will not.
If you don'
Re:Suing for damages? Inappropriate, IMHO (Score:2)
Re:Suing for damages? Inappropriate, IMHO (Score:2)
No. That is more than would be required of the defendant to stop violating the copyright. To stop violating the copyright, he can simply stop distributing the material. Releasing his own code (which he has based on GPLed code) might be an option the defendant would have, but it is not something he can be forced to do.
Re:Suing for damages? Inappropriate, IMHO (Score:2, Insightful)
thank you very much... not (Score:5, Informative)
So why start a new project? (Score:5, Informative)
I guess Yay! for GPL being upheld in court. Yay! For independent an DIY auto repair folks. However, bummer for a project that really needs some new blood.
I don't see anything for the GPL in here (Score:5, Interesting)
The answer, as it was in the prior case cited, was "no".
It seems that the license of the software involved wasn't related to the case at all, other than as a "starting point" for the case to begin. If the code had been BSD-licensed, they wouldn't have been suing the SAE first. If nothing else, it simply indicates that you can issue a DMCA takedown notice for GPL'd code someone else is using without obeying the GPL license.
Non-Infringing Use of the DCMA? (Score:2)
Somehow, the thought of using the DCMA to defend the GPL just seems highly ironic, as well as downright unclean.
Re:Non-Infringing Use of the DCMA? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Non-Infringing Use of the DCMA? (Score:2)
use it to destroy itself.
Re:I don't see anything for the GPL in here (Score:2)
GPL win how? (Score:2, Insightful)
It's like saying "Axemurderer convicted of killing author of GPL-released code" is a big win for the GPL. It wasn't part of the case, near as I can tell.
What a nice gesture! (Score:2)
Re:What a nice gesture! (Score:2)
Not that big a deal. (Score:2)
It's certianly a win for the GPL: the judge refused to grant summary judgement, and the settlement clearly showed that they were afraid of the GPL.
But it is not a judge ruling "yes, this license is valid and binding". Indeed, it's not a judge ruling anything.
Re:Not that big a deal. (Score:2)
No, it's not. In a motion for summary judgement, the judge must act as if anything that has not been decided (ie is the GPL binding) must be interpreted as if it's 100% in the non-moving party's favour - so it's not a win in any sense that way.
Think about SCO - the fact that their multi-billion-line fishing expedition probably won't get them any evidence was enough for the judge to deny IBM's motion for summary judgement.
the
Legislated methods question (Score:3, Interesting)
NOT BIG WIN - NOT WIN, MAYBE BIG (Score:3, Insightful)
Until it is tried, adjudicated, and upheld, the original statement stands. At best, the GPL has been tested, but not proven.
Get your facts straight. This headline is deceptive and wrong.
the settlement really needed... (Score:2)
such people should be punished, not rewarded for their idiocy. ejecting them from the SAE would be an appropriate punishment imo.
imo that is the best way to "improve the SAE". not contributing money so they can continue more of the same.
Re:the settlement really needed... (Score:2)
if they refuse, then ejecting them from the SAE would be appropriate.
sycophants? (Score:2)
Why does every groklaw article that shows up here rub me the wrong way ... even when I always seem to be on their ideological side of the fence.
Now there is a case in Michigan, which just settled, where the GPL not only stood its ground, it came off victorious, and this time it was very much a part of the case.
IANAL (and neither is groklaw) but how can a settlement be considered a test of the GPL or even a victory? Unless their intent is to spin the result which doesn't do anyone any good. So why are th
No, we're not greedy... (Score:2)
From the article:
you had the SAE, the standards body which publishes the standards, which essentially tried to claim copyright on the software and intended to charge DrewTech thousands per year to use the very software DrewTech employees had written and released under the GPL. [emphasis mine]
Nothing says greed like charging someone else for the right to use his own work.
The problem with the patent system is not that it rewards the inventor - that's fine - but that it also allows a lazy but devio
Re:No, we're not greedy... (Score:3, Interesting)
While I can sympathize with this sentiment, there are a couple of case I can relate to where the cease and desist orders were simply ignored.
The most recent case occured maybe 7 or 8 years ago now, in the broadcast industry, where we all got
morons (Score:2)
If you need the tax writeoff, you can donate it somewhere else. The SAE, being part of the automotive conglomerate, tried to fuck these developers, they got busted, and the developers just rolled over and LET THE SAE fuck them.
Some charitable good will, to say "oh, we caught you this time, now you'd better be more careful stealing other people's shit"???
Here I thought
Re:morons (Score:4, Insightful)
PJ: Why did you donate back half of what you won under the settlement?
Eric: The reason for donation of half back is because the purpose of the lawsuit always has been to benefit and improve the SAE. It may have been necessary to drag them kicking and screaming up the learning curve, but my client has done so precisely because the organization needed the benefit of the learning experience.
The whole point is that DrewTech has been very generous to the SAE by donating 1/2 of the money back as a charitable contribution, to symbolize the educational benefit conferred on the organization (in particular, organization staff -- as distinct from the Membership, who mostly tend to "get" the GPL) through the mechanism of the lawsuit as a whole.
I thought.... (Score:5, Insightful)
The doctrine is now enshrined in 17 U.S.C. 102(b). The relevant section says:
(b) In no case does copyright protection for an original work of authorship extend to any idea, procedure, process, system, method of operation, concept, principle, or discovery, regardless of the form in which it is described, explained, illustrated, or embodied in such work.
A lot of people think that their ideas, procedures, processes, etc... are (or can be) protected by copyright. The answer here is - no. They can not be protected by copyright. These are protected by patents.
Tangibles => copyrights
Intanigbles => patents
(I don't know about anyone else, but I do get a lot of questions on this when friends/relatives/and other stranger persons ask me about copyrights. And no, IANAL! I just like to read about the law. [Surprised my own lawyer by how much I knew about the law.
nothing to do with the GPL (Score:3, Informative)
1. some people (Drew) wrote some software that complied to (implemented) a standard.
2. the standard is copyrighted by someone else, the SAE (the issue of whether they can copyright or charge royalties on something that's part of the law I think is a side issue).
3. SAE tried to claim ownership of the copyright of the software, claiming it was a "deriviative work" of the standard.
4. they were unsuccessful in doing so, the core reason being because copyright only covers a particular composition of text, not the "ideas, procedures, processes, methods of operation, concepts, principles, or discoveries," that may be described, explained, illustrated, or embodied" within it. if I write a book explaining how to turn lead into gold, you can't copy the sentences and paragraphs I wrote. but you can certainly write your own book explaining the same procedure. this is a long-standing principle, and no new legal ground was broken here - no precedents.
5. Drew was confirmed as the legal copyright owners of their software, not the SAE, which was what the case was about.
6. Drew (had) happened to release the code under the GPL. This is an expression of how they wish to excercise their copyrights. But nothing about the GPL was tested or decided. Only that Drew owns the copyright, which allows them to release it under GPL, and SAE cannot prevent them from doing that because SAE does not own the copyright because it is not a derivative of SAE's copyrighted work.
the validity and terms of the GPL never entered into it. talk about a "victory for the GPL" is nonsense.
This should have been a PATENT case (Score:2)
Of course I haven't read the software source in question, nor the works from which the software was to have been a derivative work... though if I understand it correctly, the software isn't a derivative work from software but from some form of published standard... a protocol or format. This, more or less, falls unde
Searched everywhere but Google? (Score:2, Informative)
There are more than 300,000 pages referring to "gnu public license", and that is just in Google. That is just with quotes, too! One of the links [wikipedia.org] points to a good wikipedia article, as well.
Re:Searched everywhere but Google? (Score:2)
Here's the punchline for the humour-impaired (98.67% of Slashdot): There is no license named "GNU Public License". Really there is not. The "G" in "GPL" stands for "General".
Re:Searched everywhere but Google? (Score:3, Insightful)
Except that it is the GNU General Public License [gnu.org], not the "GNU Public License", which is what the poster was pointing out.
Re:Searched everywhere but Google? (Score:3, Insightful)
Sure. There are more than four thousand Google hits for "life on Jupiter", so it is now proven that there's life on Jupiter, right?
That's about the GNU General Public License. We're discussing the "GNU Public License" here.
Re:Searched everywhere but Google? (Score:2)
Re:GNU Public License? (Score:2)
Re:GNU Public License? (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes.
Sure, but does any of the pages contain a hint that a "GNU Public Licence" actually exists?
I know what the GNU General Public License is. Follow the link in my sig, and you'll see that I've used it myself for years. The article, however, talks about a "GNU Public License".
The Penguin has grown strong teeth, Robin! (Score:3, Funny)
Or the plot for "Batman 6".
Re:The Penguin has grown [strong] teeth! (Score:2)
How do you tell? (Score:2, Insightful)
Similarly, allowing library linkage to be a valid way to bypass the GPL would just result in everybody putting existing GPL sources into a "library structure" and linking in. Congrats, you'd have a way to completely de-tooth the GPL.
U
Re:Static vs. Dynamic linking (Score:2)
Re:GPL Derivative Works (Score:2)
Point 6a describes o
Re:GPL Derivative Works (Score:4, Interesting)
When those GPL'd libraries are linked in, staticly or dynamicly at runtime, you are still making use of code that bears a GPL license. If your code that wants to use that GPL licensed code as part of its functionality isn't GPL also, then the linking is, and properly so, a violation of the GPL and illegal by copyright law.
There is no 'slightly pregnant' here. If you want to use GPL'd code, then your code must be likewise GPL'd or under an approved similar license. End of discussion.
Gawd I wish some dummy would actually let this get to where the judge renders his/her opinion for public record and let the precedent actually be set instead of saveing a few on attorneys fees with a settlement when they realise that tweaking the GPL tigers tail is going to get them eaten.
You're right about one thing, these decisions really are quite obvious. Oh, and go learn how to spell license too. There are in fact several ways, but yours is not among them in my dictionary.
--
Cheers, gene
"There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty:
soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order."
-Ed Howdershelt (Author)
99.34% setiathome rank, not too shabby for a WV hillbilly
Re:Question (Score:2)
Yes.
Duh.
Re:Question (Score:2)
T
Re:*applause* (Score:2)
1.) Copyright infringement on P2P networks is okay. It's not theft.
2.) Copyright infringement of GPL source code is not okay. It's theft.
Just repeating that the GPL improves freedom isn't really saying anything other than RMS propaganda. There are real issues here revolving around the usage restrictions of intellectual property. If the discussion is to ever go anywhere, there needs to be a rational starting point.
Re:*applause* (Score:2)
then:
1a.) Copyright infringment of works under 28 years old on P2P networks is not OK.
1b.) It's not necessarily theft either, but its not OK.
2a.) Copyright infringment of works over 28 years old on P2P networks is OK.
2b.) (Corrolary derived from an