On Jun 14, 2007, Daniel Hazelton <[email protected]> wrote:
> <somewhat sarcastic>
> And the companies that produce devices that come with Linux and/or
> other GPL'd software installed and place limits such that only
> people that have purchased that hardware have access to the
> "modified" source running on the device are following the letter,
> and the spirit, of the GPL.
WAIT, WAIT, THAT'S... :-)
> Before you start yelling I'm wrong, think about it this way: they
> make the source available to the people that they've given binary
> versions to, and there is nothing stopping one of those people from
> making the source available to the rest of the world.
The *only* in your sentence betrayed you.
If they place the limits such that nobody else can access the sources,
they're in violation of the license.
If they merely refrain from distributing the sources to others, but
still enable the recipients to do so, this is not a violation of the
license.
But then IANAL.
> *AND* the GPL has never been about making the source available to
> everyone - just to those that get the binaries.
Exactly. Not even to the upstream distributor. That's where Linus'
theory of tit-for-tat falls apart.
--
Alexandre Oliva http://www.lsd.ic.unicamp.br/~oliva/
FSF Latin America Board Member http://www.fsfla.org/
Red Hat Compiler Engineer aoliva@{redhat.com, gcc.gnu.org}
Free Software Evangelist oliva@{lsd.ic.unicamp.br, gnu.org}
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