FC4 or FC5

Sean seanlkml at sympatico.ca
Sat Jun 17 22:03:21 UTC 2006


On Sat, 17 Jun 2006 16:56:31 -0500
Les Mikesell <lesmikesell at gmail.com> wrote:

> If any portion of the code is covered by the GPL, the work
> as a whole must be distributed under the GPL or not at
> all.  No other terms are permitted.  Source distribution and
> no additional restrictions on redistribution are required.

If you're going to repeat the same crap, i'll repeat the same
answer in hope you can grasp it this time:

If you want to base your work on the work of another that is
released under the GPL, then you must accept the terms of the
bargain.  It's called FAIR EXCHANGE.
 
> It is possible for the owner of a work to release it under
> different licenses, one of which might be the GPL, if
> that's what you mean.  But then it's not using the GPL
> at all under the other terms and can't include any code
> that does.

And you don't have the right to redistribute any software
you buy from Microsoft.  The GPL gives you way more rights
to software than any license you've ever entered into with
Microsoft.

> You are the one who brought up the point.  I'm just pointing
> out the unlikely nature of such an event.

It's already happened.  IBM has released RCU code to the GPL
community.  Red Hat and others have large patent pools which 
they have released to the GPL community.  It's unfortunate
you're so ignorant of such things.

> Maybe you can get the rights for the new HD DVD formats if there
> are any patents involved...

Or maybe IBM can or Red Hat or someone else making more money from
GPL software than I can.  Or maybe it will turn out that such a
license isn't worth it and some GPL friendly hardware will come
along that fills the need instead.  *shrug*.

Sean




More information about the fedora-list mailing list