Daniel Hazelton wrote: >> I always did imply a "within reason". To me that means "if it is >> simple for them to do it and can be simply extended to me as well >> then they have to extend it". Handing out a SHA1 key definitely is >> simple and thus IMO something I can expect them to do. > But the "within reason" isn't there. That some people have inferred that term > applies doesn't matter. You know I was reading the "Wizard of the crow" yesterday (a terrific book about an imaginary dictatorship in Africa) and at one point a minister makes the mistake of using a wording that implies the Ruler and the Country may not be one and the same. Realising his error he quickly suggests adding to the constitution Ruler=Country. Which fails to mollify the Ruler who replies something like "the constitution does not writes the Sun shines, should it?"¹ Law texts are not self-contained logical units like software code. There is always an implied "#include common-sense.h and #include reason.h" in them. Law texts won't spell out common-sense limits. Law texts won't write about situations not happening in real life. Which brings me to another point. What happens when a new situation arises? Is it sufficient to do a litteral reading of existing legal texts to decide what's authorised or not? I'll say no. If something obviously new happens (like DRM did those past years) you *have* to check intent and not just verify if you can weasel by existing wording (and of course ideally wording is adjusted to lift any ambiguïty). Alan Cox could sue Tivo today for all his code they use because his reading of the license he released code under is not the same as theirs. Hell if Linus was named Tivo CEO today Alan could probably sue Linus successfully too. All the messages of people who claim they know the legal status of Tivo WRT its use of GPL-v2 Linux code under DRM is just this – noise. It's trivial to show GPL-v2 didn't envision DRM. It's trivial to show many smart people do not have the same GPLv2 interpretation as Linus. Till the intent of every significant kernel contributor is checked there is no legal certainty. Refusing to look it up may be expedient but won't lift the legal cloud. ¹ Hope this will lighten the mood a bit -- Nicolas Mailhot
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