On Sunday 17 June 2007 09:54:39 Michael Poole wrote:
I don't. I was *REPEATING* an example of how TiVO has a *RIGHT* to change the
kernel or any other facet of the device connecting to their network. That
right *ISN'T* tied to copyright - as you have stated. Since it isn't, why is
the FSF trying to mandate that it is with the tivoization clauses in GPLv3?
Nope. Because that isn't a right they have that is disconnected from copyright
law. Or did you not read the entire post and just decide to try and make me
look stupid?
At no point have I claimed to know how TiVO was accomplishing the "connection
to the service" or how they were handling the signing of the kernel. If the
final binary is altered by the signing process then, IMHO, the signed kernel
and everything involved in creating it constitutes a "derived work".
My argument is that, as much as people want it to be different, in mandating
that people give up rights that are (potentially) disconnected from the
copyright - in order to "Defend the Four Freedoms" and keep "all users of the
licensed work equal in their freedoms" - the GPLv3 is flawed and potentially
unenforceable.
DRH
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