Benjamin LaHaise wrote:
On Mon, Dec 05, 2005 at 11:18:15PM -0500, Michael Poole wrote:
Besides, if the act of linking is what makes the derivative work,
there is no problem: The GPL allows a user to make any modifications
or combinations or derivatives whatsoever, and only imposes
requirements when the result is distributed. The linking of the two
works occurs only on the end user's machine.
But if it's a module, it's probably been compiled against kernel headers.
Last time I checked, header files were covered by the GPL unless explicitly
placed under a more permissive license. How do you use something like
spinlocks without compiling in GPL code to a module?
They can always claim that reverse engineering works both ways.
Linux spinlocks can be reverse engineered, or they can search
the mailing list archives for detailed explanations. :-/
Helge Hafting
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