From: "Alan Cox" <alan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Friday, 2010/September/10 01:25 >> > I wonder what changed to cause Broadcom to change tune. Broadcom >> > seemed >> > to think that their secret sauce was oh so important to keep secret. >> > >> > -wolfgang >> >> I think the reason was that the driver would expose information >> about the inner design of their chipset, which they felt might >> compromise the secrecy of product design advantages (or perhaps >> disadvantages). > > Broadcom have been helpful in other areas. > > Wireless has been particularly problematic for many vendors for a long > time because the US regulations require wireless devices are not user > tamperable. This leads to questions like "what does that mean if it's open > source and you can set an unapproved frequency or power by hacking the > code" > > The penalties for getting that wrong are rather high. Some vendors have > done things like alternate firmware which does the sanity checks on card. > I've no idea what actually drove the Broadcom decision and how they've > actually addressed it, but for wireless manufacturers the open-sourcing > decisions have been a good deal more complicated than simple "secret > sauce" type arguments. Which is particularly annoying to me because I hold a license that allows me to use this sort of capabilities in one specific band that is within the capabilities of the typical wireless chips. I can also use serious power if I wish. {^_-} -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines