On Thursday 14 June 2007 11:44:07 Bernd Paysan wrote:
And the Linux kernel community has been familiar with this situation all
along. It's the bargain the kernel developers struck with each other a
decade and a half ago.
Now the FSF is coming along and being Darth Vader: "I am altering the bargain.
Pray I don't alter it any further."
That's not specifically a limitation of the GPL, that's a limitation of
copyright law which forms the basis of the GPL. It covers distribution, not
usage.
GPLv2 eliminates the case where I have a modified binary I contributed to, but
can't see the source code of those modifications. This has the pragmatic
effect of greatly reducing forking in a project, such as the Emacs/Lucid
Emacs fork that inspired the "Emacs license" that became GPLv1.
Rob
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