On 6/18/07, H. Peter Anvin <[email protected]> wrote:
> You probably don't want do design a license without involving a
> competent lawyer. We don't expect lawyers to write kernel code, either.
True enough, and I realized this when I wrote my initial post, but it's not
what I wrote so much as the concept. I haven't seen the idea come up in any
threads, so I thought I'd throw it out there.
Open source and free software are clearly two different things, so it doesn't
make sense that an open source project would use a free software license. The
FSF has made it very clear that their objectives are very different from
ours.
The GPLv2 is a great license, but it's not perfect. The FSF recognised several
of the problems when they introduced the first public draft of v3. Since they
are heading in an opposite direction from the open source community, I
believe that we are now facing a clear dividing line between the two camps.
We cannot cling to the fifteen year-old license forever, expecting to never
be burnt.
If we can't adopt the GPLv3, it seems obvious to me that we need our own
solution.
--
It's a commonly known fact that most intruders come in through Windows.
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