FSF Releases Third Draft of GPLv3 390
johnsu01 writes "The Free Software Foundation has announced publication
of the third discussion draft of the
GNU General Public License Version 3. Because quite a few changes have been
made since the previous draft and important new issues have surfaced, the
drafting process has been extended and revised to
encourage more feedback. The most
significant changes in this draft
include refinements in the "tivoization" provisions to eliminate unwanted side
effects, revision of the patent provisions to prevent end-runs around the
license, and further steps toward compatibility with other free software
licenses. The FSF has also explicitly asked the community whether the new
patent provisions should apply retroactively to the Microsoft-Novell deal."
3rd-party Analysis? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Read it over and over for the next 3 days.
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http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1895,2108409,00.as p [eweek.com]
The Free Software Foundation just published this morning a new draft of the last version of the General Public License, GPL3. This version takes aim specifically at the Microsoft and Novell agreement and seeks to prevent future similar agreements. Peter Galli/eWEEK reported on the news questioning if this new version will forever doom the license. "The draft has evolved over time, but GPLv3 is still clearly designed to build unscalabl
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http://blogs.zdnet.com/BTL/?p=4747 [zdnet.com]
Can they do that? (Score:5, Insightful)
Is that really an option? Wouldn't that be changing the terms of the license (v2) after it was distributed and agreed to? I don't understand how they can affect the Novell deal without going through the trouble of upgrading Linux to GPLv3-- and even then Novell should be able to use old Linux released under GPLv2, no?
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> was distributed and agreed to?
GPL v2 has a clause that the licensed code (or whatever) is aviable on GPL v2 basis or any further version of GPL. Linux uses GPL v2 without this clause.
> I don't understand how they can affect the Novell deal without
> going through the trouble of upgrading Linux to GPLv3
Linus specificaly stated that he is against using GPL v3 in its current form. Also it would be hard to change Linux license since
Re:Can they do that? (Score:5, Informative)
Actually, he probably meant draft-2 form. The current form didn't exist when he said that :-) .
Besides, specific objections are more helpful. Like he is against some DRM-related terms. I have gone over some of those terms here [technocrat.net], you might find that useful.
Bruce
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Yes
'Wouldn't that be changing the terms of the license (v2) after it was distributed and agreed to?'
No. Novell would still be able to work with GPLv2 stuff. Just not GPLv3 stuff.
'I don't understand how they can affect the Novell deal without going through the trouble of upgrading Linux to GPLv3-'
Why? Nobody is really concerned about Novell borrowing patented Microsoft concepts to include into the Operating System. The areas of concern of Novell's contributions to projects like Sam
Re:Can they do that? (Score:5, Informative)
Everybody: Linux is just the kernel. Linus does not control anything else, and has less than absolute control over that.
Bruce
Re:Good luck. (Score:5, Informative)
Say what? Where do you think it was developed before Linux came along?
On Sun. RMS used to program on a Sun. GNU LIBC existed before it was ported to Linux. GCC did. Emacs did. Most of the userland did. Linus Torvalds did the last part, not the first.
I can think of a lot of kernels besides HURD and Minix. You could start with BSD and Solaris, but that's hardly the end of the list.
Bruce
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I didn't really consider Sun as wanting to be a sincere partner in the Free Software community, due to their starting out by making incompatible licenses. I think they figured that out now. And Jonathan doesn't say stupid stuff about us all the time any longer. So, I am waiting for them to drop the CDDL, since even they seem to think it's a dead-end now. So it might be moot wheth
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Bruce
No, there's nothing retrospective (Score:2)
The decision is whether the patent deal provisions should apply to all such patent deals, including the Novell-MS one, or only patent deals that are made from now on.
So the question to the community is: Do Novell deserve to be let off?
And the question to Novell is: What promise can you make to earn the communities trust so that they could justify letting you off?
(I've also clarif
Re:Can they do that? (Score:4, Informative)
Bruce
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Better not to make any specific grandfather clause in the license. If someone doesn't want to follow the license, they just don't use any of those applications/libraries.
Re:Can they do that? (Score:5, Informative)
Bruce
Retroactively? (Score:5, Insightful)
I didn't see that in any of TFAs; does anyone have a link?
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1) Microsoft asserts that Linux violates its patents
2) Microsoft fails to provide any evidence or back up this claim in court
3) Microsoft signs an agreement with Novell stating that they covenant not to sue any users of Novell's brand of Linux
This sort of evil FUD will work pretty much no matter what, and it's pretty much what's happening now. There's absolutely nothing that I can think of that would legally
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Bruce
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I disagree. The terms of the license might be able to prevent Microsoft from distributing your software, but th
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Actually, they really could, as long as there is a contract or agrement to shield users between the party making the covenant to users and the partner who is doing the distribution of GPL3 software.
But in this case it's even more clear, since Microsoft is distributing coupons that can be redee
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What's the purpose if it happens to block the means of the current shadiness, but there are plenty of other means left unblocked that will achieve the same ends? In other words, once the GPLv3 is released, Microsoft can just stop doing any distribution themselves (that hardly affects their position), and make the
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The Novell-Microsoft deal really strikes at developer motivation. Why write "fre
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It could not prohibit the deal itself, but it could be possible to significantly impact Novell's ability to distribute code covered by the new license, and this is what it is trying to accomplish. Novell is knowingly distributing code that its partner asserts patents against, and the partner provides a promise not to sue to Novell's customers, but nobody else.
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But its partner isn't "asserting patents against" in any legal way, they're just saying in vague ways that Linux probably violates some Microsoft patent somewhere. Furthermore, Microsoft's covenant to sue doesn't require Novell to be party to the agreement for it to work its evil.
For example, let's say Microsoft covenants not to sue RedHat Linux
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Does that not stop this? Looks like it would to me. I'm not so sure I like the f
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Sadly... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Sadly... (Score:4, Interesting)
Freedom under the GPL has always been complicated, because it means free-as-in-FSF. As I've observed before, that isn't the same as "free" by any English language definition, which would be more akin to a BSD-style licence.
The problem we're now seeing is that the FSF is redefining its own concept of free to match whatever behaviour it currently perceives to be in conflict with the ethics of those driving it. They're welcome to do that, of course, but it's beyond me why anyone else (including those who distribute their code under GPL2) would care, unless their personal ethics happen to match the FSF's exactly. Then again, I also rather suspect that a lot of people who distribute their code under the GPL do so because it's trendy in certain circles rather than because they've ever read the fine print anyway, so I'm already doomed to unhealthy karma oblivion. ;-)
How h FSF-free changed meaning? (Score:2, Insightful)
What other license looks for the users' freedoms? None. This has not changed. Just YOUR perception of what "FSF-free" means. You thought it meant YOUR freedom with someone else's code. Now you know different.
Re:Sadly... (Score:5, Insightful)
Would it? The BSD is akin to "You can do anything you want", while the GPL is akin to "You can do anything you want, except killing, raping, robbing or otherwise harming other people". The GPL is free, it just tries to stop people from restricting other peoples' freedom.
GPL is well meaning DRM for source code (Score:3, Interesting)
At the risk of sounding inflammatory, GPL is, in fact, source code DRM. If you want to use GPL licensed source you have to sign up to rules much as you have to sign up to rules when you but a tune from Apple. Again, I acknowledge that these are noble and genera
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Bad example: anarchy means "no rulers", not "no rules". An anarchic society can also be a lawful and free society.
For that matter, I would go so far as to say that any society which is not anarchic cannot be lawful, because it contains, by definition, an organization not bound to follow the laws which bind the rest of society. Any universally lawful & free society must be anarchic. (This is not to say that all anarchic societies will necessari
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It's fascinating to see an argument like this made about a licence whose supporters often claim that it would be unnecessary if copyright were abolished. :-)
In any case, I don't think your analogy (nor the more dramatic-sounding alternatives [slashdot.org]) is at all fair. If your code is truly free for others to use, then they should be able to do anything they want with it. Nothing any one person does with it will remove the ability of any other person to use your code in any other ways they see fit. There is no cost
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And how often we see people defending it writing under the label of Anonymous Coward. Truly lends credibility to the idea that the FSF are worth defending, doesn't it?
As for how the other definition keeps changing; it doesn't. My own definition of a free software license is one that in addition to Stallman's four freedoms, also:-
Good for lawyers (Score:2, Funny)
1. Open a law firm
2. Interpret the GNU GPLv3
3...Profit!
simplicity is good for everyone, and v3 is simpler (Score:2)
Clarity is good for everyone. The text is longer than v2, but it is more explicit and should be clearer. If you see a way to make it clearer, please submit a comment.
Here's some suggestions for how to increase simplicity [fsfe.org].
What happened to web apps? (Score:4, Insightful)
Right now if I write some code and GPL it someone can take that code, use it in the regular ways that is permitted by the GPL, but then instead of distributing it, they turn it into a web-app and charge people to use the code. Since they are not technically distributing the binaries, they don't have to release the code, whether they've modified it or not.
Re:What happened to web apps? (Score:5, Insightful)
And I've never understood why this is bad.
A web app on a website is a source code usage, not distribution. The code runs on the web server and never leaves it. So why should I bother about it? In what sense it's different from me modifying a GPL program on my machine only and having my friends using it on my machine?
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There's little difference between running a binary on your computer and interacting with it and running a binary on someone else's computer and interacting with it. A web-app is no different than an app displayed through remote X-Windows. If you want to get legalistic, I could argue that putting the web app on the website isn't usage so much as performance.
In addition, the latest draf
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What's the real difference? Think of it as "virtual" distribution via the Web.
GPL was written before the rise of web apps, but as web apps have become more and more used, GPL must change with the times. Imagine that in the next 5 years, 80% of apps are web apps, and GPL doesn't cover them. GPL is pretty much useless then. Imagine that in the future, Microsoft makes a web version of Office. There'd be nothing preventing them from using GP
Re:What happened to web apps? (Score:4, Insightful)
But it was written after the rise of console apps. To the best of my knowledge, if I hack a GPLv2 text app and you SSH into my server to run it, I don't have to give you the modified source. I'm not distributing the app to you - I'm just letting you execute it. In what way is that essentially different from running an application via a web service?
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But I do think it goes against the spirit of the GPL. When a coder puts something under the GPL what they are usually meaning to say is "everyone who uses this app (and it's derivatives) should get the code too if they want it". Denying users the code to the web app that you are making them pay to use is taking away the freedom that the original author intended for them, IMO. If you modify some GPL'd code and let your frie
Reaction to GPLv3 (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm curious how the adoption of GPLv3 will play out. The kernel is going to stay at v2 for the foreseeable future, so the new version will mostly apply to the GNU tool chain. There are enough companies out there who like the loopholes of v2 (TiVo, SuSE, etc.), will they maintain a fork of the code that stays licensed under v2, perhaps individually, perhaps as a collective effort amongst those with reason to balk at v3? Another possibility is to just keep on using versions of the code that were released under v2. Some things, like /bin/ls, really don't change enough that everyone will feel compelled to step up to the latest version. On the other hand, if the GNU software the company depends on is gcc, staying at a particular release and not having support for new processor technologies in your compiler would start to become problematic after a while.
So, how do you guys think the companies for whom adopting GPLv3 would eliminate loopholes will react to the new license? Somehow, I don't think they will just all go, "Oh, so that's how you intended Free Software to be used. We will play nicely from now on."
Re:Reaction to GPLv3 (Score:4, Interesting)
Bruce
Quick issues (Score:4, Interesting)
* They mention you need to supply "Corresponding Source" (eg, signing keys for Tivo-ization) to all "User Products" but defined "user Products" to basically mean anything that goes in the home. So business-style rack appliances that are not designed for the home can Tivo-ize at their leisure. This is apparently intentional, according to the rationale pdf. This seems....messy, and a huge potential hole.
* Moving away from calling out specific parts of the US code for the anti-DMCA parts and over to calling out the WIPO is a bit better for international users of the GPL, but they then call out US code again in the definition of a home device. This is problematic. Defining a for-the-home product in other countries will be difficult. (What do we do for this license in countries that have no such distinction?) They seem to acknowledge this in the rationale PDF, and say that they're evaluating it.
(Personally, I think these two issues are just the beginning of the uglyness with the anti-tivo-ization stuff, and they'll eventually be forced to drop these clauses in the name of sanity, but that's just me.)
* The anti-Novell portion is *incredibly* confusing. There has to be a better way to say that. It seems to be written just to target Novell and the specific thing Novell is doing, which I think invites problems. For example, what if the third party you make a deal with isn't in the business of distributing software? (such as the patent/IP houses that exist all over the place) Is a "we won't sue your customers" deal okay then? This section needs a *lot* more thought.
two non issues .. (Score:2)
'Products that are commonly used for personal as well as commercial purposes are consumer products, even if the person invoking rights is a commercial entity [fsf.org] intending to use the product for commercial purposes', rationale.pdf
'what if the third party you make a deal with isn't in the business of distributing software?'
Well
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2) So Novell signing a MS-style patent deal with a patent shop (ie, only Novell customers won't get sued) is okay? I really doubt that's the intent.
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Bruce
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If that is the case why not simply allow the keys to be held by the provider till they are requested. Then the customer can not request the keys, but if requested the must be provided.This would allow the companies and governments that do not want there rights to have it their way. While other customers would not be forced to by only "User Products". Or if someo
Freedom Means People Do Things You Don't Like (Score:2, Interesting)
Real freedom is allowing people to use free software for good or ill.
where are my royalties .. (Score:2)
How would you feel if I demanded royalty payments for your Linux desktop that you didn't buy from me.
Still no Apache/GPL compatibility (Score:2)
My opinion is... (Score:4, Funny)
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Concerns for the GPLv3 (Score:4, Insightful)
1) Will I be able to understand the license? (and if not do I really want to release code under it?) I would strongly suggest a non-legalase summary be included in the final version.
2) Will it actually be worth anything outside the US? Every single legal reference pointed to US law, they take definitions from existing US laws and they comment that certain provisions are compatible with US law. I'm beginning to wonder if RMS and co. realize that a majority of the world lives outside the US.
Perhaps they are attempting to concentrate on US law and then branch out into the rest of the world later but to me that seems a somewhat dubious tactic since the thing looks so complex at the moment that I'm not convinced that it can be compatible with multiple countries' laws all at once. So I also wonder if there will end up being multiple versions of GPLv3 as you go around the world.
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"retroactively" was just a bad choice of word (Score:5, Informative)
The question asked is whether the provisions that prevent deals such as the MS-Novell deal should have an explicit exclusion for that deal by Novell. i.e. such deals will be blocked in future, but should people who've already made such deals be prohibited from distributing GPLv3'd software?
That's the question asked.
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That's *not* what it says, again because there is no legal grounds for that anywhere.
The provisions in section 11 say, essentially, that you can't transfer the grant of patent license to your customers when distributing GPL v3 software. That simply means that if the software violates the patent, then end user, not the distributor, is always responsible for the infring
Re:"retroactively" was just a bad choice of word (Score:5, Informative)
You don't have that right. You can transfer a patent license to your users as long as you do so to everyone. The point is that you can't create privileged groups like "people who have paid lots of money for protection" who have more rights than others.
I don't see how this is anti-user. It's an attempt to assure that everyone has a right to run the program.
Bruce
Re:"retroactively" was just a bad choice of word (Score:5, Interesting)
The fact of the matter is that under a deal like the Microsoft/Novell deal, the distributor of the GPLed software doesn't have the right to grant the protection to everyone. Thus the clause means they can't grant it to anybody. The only loser is the end-user of the software who has no hope of protection from patent suits if they want to use GPLv3 software.
It's an attempt, sure. It's a noble effort even, and I'm as opposed to software patents as the next developer who works on GPLed software for a living. But I think that it is a failed attempt.
Re:"retroactively" was just a bad choice of word (Score:5, Interesting)
It's based on the principle: we must all hang together or we will surely hang separately.
Bruce
Re:"retroactively" was just a bad choice of word (Score:4, Insightful)
True. That is the point.
'Thus the clause means they can't grant it to anybody. The only loser is the end-user of the software who has no hope of protection from patent suits if they want to use GPLv3 software.'
You make it sound like the result would be users open to litigation. The distributor can't just distribute the software to users anyway, they lose their right to distribute under the GPLv3. There will be no unprotected users because the patent encumbered modified version is barred from distribution to users. Rather than some users being protected and downstream users being screwed, there will be no users unless the vendor removes patent encumbered code or negotiates a deal that DOES allow them to pass patent protections downstream.
Re:"retroactively" was just a bad choice of word (Score:5, Insightful)
You have this backwards. The requirement that the patent license is provided to everyone *IS* the protection against patent suits for using GPLv3 software.
If a company distributes software under GPLv3, then elects to sue someone for using that software in violation of a patent, they open themselves up to being sued for violating the copyrights in that software by other contributors. Because the contributors have said 'You may not copy my code if you don't give everyone a patent license to use it and the derivative works.'
Separately, you are also only looking at half of the equation. Some users who are willing to pay to not be sued may lose out on being able to have the software. BUT, that doesn't matter any more than it matters that I've 'lost' the ability to run Windows unless I buy it. What *IS* important is that the contributors to free software have the copyrights in THEIR work protected. They have agreed to distribute their work to the community so long as it can be freely redistributed. If you do not prohibit distribution of software with a patent license, you are allowing companies to take the free software, modify it with patent-encumbered software, then UN-freely redistribute it.
This strikes to the very core of what free software is. If you're going to use free software, then you need to provide free software. Patent encumbered software isn't free, and just like we wouldn't allow GPL software to end up in a proprietary binary sold for profit without source, EVEN THOUGH it denies some users that software, we shouldn't let it end up in patent-encumbered source either, EVEN THOUGH it also denies some users that software.
Preventing non-free software from being created with free software is the whole point, isn't it?
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DRM is usually used to prevent users from running some software or using some data on open systems. This new language is designed to prevent users from using GPL software on closed systems. It may be the opposite result, but it's the same tactic. As long as the source is available I don't see what the big deal is about building closed devices with free
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Yes it does. The new 'Installation Info' requirements would require the distributor to provide all the prerequisites including access to the closed software a modified open program would need to operate.
True meaning of :"retroactively" (Score:3, Insightful)
modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version."
This means that the program you write is also covered by GPL3, as soon as it's out. I guess that is what retroactive means in this contest
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For those too lazy to read the entire current draft, here is the "Microsoft-Novell" paragraph:
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Suppose you have included this boilerplate in your code, then you look at the text
Re:"retroactively" was just a bad choice of word (Score:4, Informative)
Re:"retroactively" was just a bad choice of word (Score:5, Interesting)
Things have definitely changed since that day, but the threat of finding loopholes in the GPL to lock it up again and return us to the 1980s still remains. It remains to be seen of the GPLv3 helps or hinders free software (it has to maintain a fine balance between pragmatism and idealism). But at least the "additional permissions" feature of getting the GPL to be more compatible with other licenses (and reduce license fragmentation) and the Novell-Microsoft patent feature are definite improvements.
Re:"retroactively" was just a bad choice of word (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.gnu.org/gnu/byte-interview.html [gnu.org]
Which now I'll have to invest some time in reading.
Re:"retroactively" was just a bad choice of word (Score:5, Insightful)
GCC is the biggie there; since it's an official GNU project (which means its copyright is owned by the FSF) you know it's going to become GPL v3 as soon as the license is ready.
This could be ok if Novell worked with FSF (Score:2)
Maybe there is a way out of this where Novell could repent, make a promise which would nullify the harms it created, and then we could go back to working together.
Fixing the patent situation is necessary, but it is worth asking for suggestions for the most productive way of doing this.
This also answer feranick's question, below. Maybe Novell, or Novell+MS could make a 2nd deal which would make things ok again.
So FSF is looking for some inspiration, a little creativ
Adoption? (Score:5, Insightful)
Bruce
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Could you back that up please?
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It will at least be adopted by the entire GNU project. If that still counts as being stillborn by your definition, I don't know.
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The GPLvANYTHING doesn't apply to users. You only need the permissions (and conditions required to get those permissions) of the GPL to modify and/or distribute the software. The GPLv3 is no more or less than an adjustment of the conditions required to get permission to modify and/or distribute software.
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Hey, release early, release often.
(Which seems as good a time as any to link to the UPS Debugger Song, better known as "Just one more hack and then I'll put it on the 'net" [kent.ac.uk].)
Re:I thought it was out already?! (Score:5, Informative)
Pluss, they want to take their time so that anyone who wants can voice their oppinion and be heard. Why rush it? Let them take their time and make it right, the first time.
How to Circumvent GPLv3 v1 DRAFT (Score:3, Interesting)
1. Sell your derivative work to a distributor as two CDs, one with the compiled code, and one with the source.
2. Distributor discards the CDs with the source and sells the CDs with the binary.
3. PROFIT!
Why this works:
Copyright does not prohibit distribution, only copying. The original party meets their GPL requirement for distributing the source by distributing the source with the binary.
The distributor has no obligation to distribute the source, since th
Re:How to Circumvent GPLv3 v1 DRAFT (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes, distribution is in fact one of the rights held only by the copyright holder and those licensed by the copyright holder. In fact, distribution is one of the rights afforded exclusively to the copyright holder and licensees under US copyright law and under the WIPO and WCT treaties. So if you don't follow this license, you can't _distribute_.
Bitlaw page about copyright [bitlaw.com]
US Copyright Office [copyright.gov]
Wikipedia page on copyright [wikipedia.org]
Findlaw's copyright page [findlaw.com]
Wikipedia WIPO page [wikipedia.org]
Dutch copyright law page on Wikipedia [wikipedia.org] (in English)
Japanese copyright law chapter II (note section 3, subsection 3) [cric.or.jp] (translated to English, obviously)
The entry for the terms in the Table of Contents for the GPL v2 is called "TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR COPYING, DISTRIBUTION AND MODIFICATION".
Here's the fourth paragraph of Preamble of the GPL v2, and notice it doesn't say "if you are the one to make the copies you distribute" anywhere:
Notice that it doesn't say you have to have modified it to be bound by the license.
Here's paragraph 5 of the license proper (emphasis mine):
The only reason the license repeatedly says "copy and distribute" is that it is granting both rights. It is not because the two are separable and you must agree to the license only if you do both.
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You're kidding, right?
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You're kidding, right?
So? does a low slashdot id equate to a knowledgeable, reasoned poster? I think not.
Anyway, not everything on Slashdot is worth reading by everybody. Each person has his own areas of interest. As far as I'm concerned, I'm happy with the GPLv2 and I've decided to stick with it for my personal software releases, so I'm not really following what's happening with GPLv3. As a result, just like the GP, I didn't know it was still a draft either, and I too think it's surpris
Re:I thought it was out already?! (Score:4, Insightful)
So? does a low slashdot id equate to a knowledgeable, reasoned poster? I think not.
Sounds like a good metric to me! ;)
On the original topic: There's no need to rush GPLv3 out the door. There's a perfectly good GPLv2 out there serving the community as we speak, so why rush? Might as well take the time to make sure everything is the best it can be before release. It's not a matter of being "complete" -- the first draft was a complete document. It's a matter of being as good as it can be. If there was nothing like it out there already, that'd be a good reason to release quickly, but since there is, might as well take all the time desired, heck, take all the time in the world, it's not like we need a GPLv3, the GPLv2 is perfectly serviceable.
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Not to mention that it's actually important to get this right. If there's a bug in the code you released, you simply fix the bug and everything's fine. If there's a big fat loophole in the license you released, you're screwed.
There is no "retroactive" change (Score:5, Informative)
So the public are asked: should Novell be banned from distributing GPLv3'd software?
And, imlicitly, I guess, Novell are asked: What assurances can you give us to win our trust so that giving you this exception is justified?
Re:There is no "retroactive" change (Score:5, Insightful)
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For the record, I don't think Google is evil. I don't think Microsoft is. Or even the recording industry. "You people", since you weren't paying attention during Ross Perot's campaign for President, means "everyone not like me".
And while I fully expect Google to further its business interests in any way it can inside the bounds of its attorney's interpretation of the law, many many Slash
Why GPL v3? (Score:5, Insightful)
The question most people seem to be wondering about with v3 is whether it's too ambitious - seeking to prevent abuses of the license in ways some disagree with. Personally, I haven't made up my mind, exactly. I think the underlying premise of the GPL is great - that it is a license that allows free usage in a way that encourages more free usage - and GPL3 is taking that further, by trying to keep people from taking advantage of free software while simultaneously using patents against it, by trying to prevent people from using free software to create devices that restrict users' freedom (the idea being, that if someone wants a big DRM box, they can write the code themselves)
The flip side, of course, is at some point free software has to be something you give. At some point you need to let go, and let people use the stuff. That's why you wrote it, right? So people would use it. This is the sticking point for me - I like what GPLv3 is trying to accomplish - I even want to support what it's trying to accomplish - but sometimes, if you want your gift of software to be really useful, you need to stop attaching quite so many strings to it.
But all that aside, the real problem with the GPL v3 is that new clause that RMS will personally strangle a kitten every time someone uses GPLv3 code in a DRM box. We've got to see about getting that clause removed.
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Exactly, and that's what other licenses are for. The GPL is definitely positioned as the Free as in "Stays Free" license; less restrictive licenses are necessary for many situations, but that doesn't mean that something as strong as the GPL isn't needed (especially for a lot of end-user software).
Isn't that whole mantra of Free software: choice?
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but sometimes, if you want your gift of software to be really useful, you need to stop attaching quite so many strings to it.
Exactly, and that's what other licenses are for. The GPL is definitely positioned as the Free as in "Stays Free" license; less restrictive licenses are necessary for many situations, but that doesn't mean that something as strong as the GPL isn't needed (especially for a lot of end-user software).
Well, sure - I'm not questioning the value of the GPLv3, just thinking out loud about how I personally feel about some of its restrictions, and how I feel about the licenses I put on my contributions to free software. But I also question how far the GPL should go in pursuit of "free and stays free" - as I said, I think at some point you have to let it go. I appreciate their effort but the GPL also has to be a license people will be comfortable using. I'm sure the two interests will balance out in the en
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Re:So I no longer have to give up my private keys? (Score:5, Informative)
Bruce
Oops, wrong URL. (Score:4, Informative)
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Well, you never demonstrated that you aren't beating your wife, and I say you are! Now the burden on you is to prove that you're not. What, you're not married? Prove that, too! I say you're beating the poor woman! :-)
You have the new license draft. Do you see any thing that says you have to give up keys? Show me the
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If by 'my private encryption keys' you mean encyption keys used to restrict the software that can be run on an operating system or embedded device then I hope not. As far as I know those are the only keys that any draft of the GPLv3 ever required disclosed.