Re: GPLv3 Position Statement

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On Wed, 27 Sep 2006, Linus Torvalds wrote:
>
> On Wed, 27 Sep 2006, Patrick McFarland wrote:
>> On Wednesday 27 September 2006 20:18, Linus Torvalds wrote:
>>> I think a lot of people may be confused because what they see is
>>>
>>>  (a) Something that has been brewing for a _loong_ time. There has been
>>>      the FSF position, and there has been the open source position, and
>>>      the two have been very clearly separated.
>>
>> But whats wrong with that? The FSF is a "project" (or really, a group
>> of projects, because some FSF projects don't agree with the FSF
>> position either), it isn't them official voice of the community.
>
> Right, I'm not saying that there is anything wrong with having two
> positions.
>
> In many ways, I'm saying the opposite. I'm saying that we should _expect_
> people to have different opinions. Everybody has their own opinion anyway,
> and expecting people not have different opinions (especially programmers,
> who are a rather opinionated lot in the first place) is just not
> realistic.
>
> There's absolutely nothing wrong with having a very wide consensus among a
> very varied developer base. In fact, I think that's _great_.
>
> And the reason I'm speaking out against the GPLv3 is that it is trying to
> "sort the chaff from the wheat". The FSF is apparently not happy with a
> wide community appeal - they want _their_ standpoint to be the one that
> matters.
>
> I have all through the "discussion" tried to explain that the great thing
> about the GPLv2 is that it allows all these people with totally different
> ideals to come together. It doesn't have to be "perfect" for any
> particular group - it's very perfection comes not from it's language, but
> the very fact that it's _acceptable_ to a very wide group.
>
> When the FSF tries to "narrow it down", they kill the whole point of it.
> The license suddenly is not a thing to get around and enjoy, it's become a
> weapon to be used to attack the enemy.
>
> Here in the US, the only watchable TV news program is "The Daily Show"
> with Jon Stewart. One of his fairly recurring themes is about how US
> politics is destroyed by all these passionate and vocal extremists, and he
> asks whether there can ever be a really passionate moderate. "Can you be
> passionate about the middle road?"
>
> Dammit, I want to be a "Passionate Moderate". I'm passionate about just
> people being able to work together on the same license, without this
> extremism.
>
> So here's my _real_ cry for freedom:
>
> "It's _ok_ to be commercial and do it just for money. And yes, you can
>  even have a FSF badge, and carry Stallmans manifesto around everywhere
>  you go. And yes, we accept people who like cryptography, and we accept
>  people who aren't our friends. You don't have to believe exactly like we
>  believe!"
>
> And for fifteen years, the GPLv2 has been a great umbrella for that.
>
> The FSF is throwing that away, because they don't _want_ to work with
> people who don't share their ideals.
>
>>>      At the same time, both camps have been trying to be somewhat polite,
>>>      as long as the fact that the split does clearly exist doesn't
>>>      actually _matter_.
>>
>> I agree. It doesn't matter because everyone is free to use whatever
>> version they want of the GPL. Of course, people do also recognize that
>> the GPL2 vs GPL3 argument is just a more subtle version of whats been
>> going on for years with BSD vs GPL.
>
> That's part of what really gets my goat. I spent too much time arguing
> with crazy BSD people who tried to tell me that _their_ license was "true
> freedom". The FSF shills echo those old BSD cries closely - even though
> they are on the exact opposite side of the spectrum on the "freedom" part.
>
> I hated BSD people who just couldn't shut up about their complaining about
> my choice of license back then (the good old BSD/MIT vs GPL flamewars).
>
>>>                      In fact, most programmers _still_ probably
>>>      don't care. A lot of people use a license not because they "chose"
>>>      it, but because they work on a project where somebody else chose the
>>>      license for them originally.
>>
>> Programmers don't care because we aren't lawyers. I mean, few things
>> are stated so simply, but lets face it, law is boring to quite a few
>> geeks, and the intersection between geeks who code and geeks who law
>> is very small.
>
> I think a _lot_ of programmers care very deeply indeed about the licenses.
> I certainly do. I wouldn't want to be a lawyer, but I care about how my
> code gets used.
>
> That said, I don't care how everybody _elses_ code gets used, which is
> apparently one of the differences between me and rms.
>
>>> Not really. It wasn't even news. The kernel has had the "v2 only" thing
>>> explicitly for more than half a decade, and I have personally tried to
>>> make it very clear that even before that, it never had anything else (ie
>>> it very much _had_ a specific license version, just by including the damn
>>> thing, and the kernel has _never_ had the "v2 or any later" language).
>>
>> Wasn't that just to prevent the FSF from going evil and juping all your code?
>
> Well, initially it wasn't even a conscious "I don't trust the FSF" thing.
> But when I chose the GPL (v2, back then) I chose _that_ license. There was
> absolutely no need for me to say "or later". If the GPLv2 ever really
> turns out to be a bad license, we can re-license _then_.
>
> Yes, it would be really really painful, but I think the "or later" wording
> is worse. How can you _ever_ sign anything sight unseen? That's just
> stupid, and that's totally regardless of any worries about the FSF.
>
> Later, when I did start having doubts about the FSF, I just made it even
> more clear, since some people wondered.
>
>> The only problem is that, alternatively, the FOSS movement was so
>> strong because of RMS's kool-aid everyone drank. The community has
>> teeth, and this is in partly because of the actions of the FSF. We
>> defend ourselves when we need to.
>>
>> Its just that, at least with the Tivo case, that the defense went a tad too
>> far.
>
> I think the FSF has always alienated as many (or more) people as they
> befriended, but maybe that's just me. I was looking for old newsgroup
> threads about this earlier in the week, and noticed somebody in the BSD
> camp saying that I was using the GPL, but that I wasn't as radical as rms.
> And iirc, that was from 1993, when Linux was virtually unknown.
>
> So I think that not being too extreme is a _good_ thing. It's how you can
> get more people involved.
>
> So everybody - join the "Passionate Moderate" movement, even if you're not
> in the US. We're not passionate about any of the issues, we are just
> _really_ fed up with extreme opinions! And we're not afraid to say so!
>
> [ The really sad part is: that was only _somewhat_ in jest. Dammit,
>  sometimes I think we really need that party! ]
>
> 			Linus

I didn't just jump right in yesterday when this first came up because
I wanted to take the time to properly compose a statement in view
of the fact that just about everything on the Internet is being
recorded forever.

I am certainly glad that Linus has awakened to the RMS threat that
I mentioned on this list several years ago. As soon as I saw
"GNU/Linux" and Stallman's claim that Linux was simply a small
component of a larger "Operating System" of which he claimed
ownership, I became much disturbed and reported the same on this
list. To many, my report was simply "the rantings of a lunatic."
However, now some are beginning to see the light as history
continues to be rewritten and a history lesson is unfolding.

Stallman's claim to ownership pitchforks hog shit in the face
of hundreds who took the time and effort to port BSD utilities
to that wondrous new operating system called Linux and I was one,
claiming no glory for myself, nor even bothering to add anything
to the BSD licenses that existed within these utilities. This
was done for the greater good of all (and of course me, because
I wanted to use these utilities under Linux), not for the political
aspirations of a few. These efforts go back to the days when
"distributions" consisted of 56 floppy disks and Linus was
in Helsinki, working on his degree. The FSF didn't exist, and
GNU was the name of an immature compiler. Sometimes we need
to be reminded of the history of a particular thing because,
once out-of-mind, history tends to be rewritten by those who
would advance in its new "interpretation."

Every time I accidentally execute `uname` with an -a instead of
a -r, I am reminded of the history rewrite as I am presented with:

Linux chaos.analogic.com 2.6.16.24 #1 SMP PREEMPT
  Wed Jul 12 11:32:34 EDT 2006 i686 i686 i386 GNU/Linux
                                              ^^^^^^^^^
If history continues to repeat itself, the FSF has just about
run its course and, when contributors continue to realize that
their tradition of giving for the common good, is being replaced
by the politics of a small body of thrill seekers, they will
revert their licenses to become more liberal rather than
restrictive. The problem could remain that excessive damage
may already have been done.

Cheers,
Dick Johnson
Penguin : Linux version 2.6.16.24 on an i686 machine (5592.66 BogoMips).
New book: http://www.AbominableFirebug.com/
_


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