Olivier Galibert wrote:
On Fri, Jan 27, 2006 at 03:00:53PM +0100, Simon Oosthoek wrote:
If I'd want to contribute code to the kernel, I'd have to comply with
the license of the kernel, which is v2 of the GPL. If I would actually
prefer my code to be licensed under v3 or higher, I'd have to specify
that my code is only licensed under v2 for the kernel to humour Linus
Torvalds and respect the license of the kernel, but in all other ways
the code is used, I only grant a license to copy under the conditions of
the GPL v3 or higher. I don't see why that would affect the distribution
of the kernel at all.
"GPLv2 only for the kernel" is a different license than "GPLv2" and is
incompatible with GPLv2.
hmm, so if I want to contribute to the kernel, but prefer my code to be
licensed under GPLv3 or higher, I would be unable to submit it to the
kernel unless I "lower my standards" to GPLv2 or higher?
If someone wants to use that code elsewhere, he can take it from the
kernel and re-use it in a GPLv2 project and further, which may violate
the terms of GPLv3 and would therefore conflict with my interests.
Of course, this may be purely theoretical, but it could block people
from submitting code to the kernel in order avoid the v2 GPL license.
From this, I think it could be concluded that it might turn out to be
quite harmful if code under GPLv3+ cannot be combined with the linux
kernel...
/Simon
PS, IANAL
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