> NAI had suspended the long-standing tradition of publishing PGP source code > for peer review, a reckless move that eroded public confidence in the > product. The new PGP Corp has reinstated this tradition, which allows > anyone to download and inspect the PGP source code for bugs, and also shows > that it has no back doors. And they still offer freeware versions for > noncommercial use.
Great. Fantastic. Peer-reviewed software is guaranteed to be of higher quality than software whose source code is hidden away. But this is NOT the same as free software. The software is still proprietary and still non-free. > From the beginning of PGP, there have always been freeware versions > available for noncommercial use, and that is still true today. But bear in > mind that if too many people just use the freeware without upgrading to a > paid-for version, the engineers that develop PGP will have to find other > work to feed their families. PGP suffered a near-death experience at the > hands of NAI, and now has a new chance for life with PGP Corp. If you want > PGP to survive this time around, you'd better ante up and pay your dues. > You may have a constitutional right to use crypto software, but someone has > to pay the developers. Free Speech is not the same as Free Beer. Again, PGP is NOT free software. "Free for noncommerical use" is not acceptable when it comes to interacting with Asterisk. Asterisk is licensed under the GPL, and therefore is incompatible for use with software that is licensed in a restrictive fashion, such as PGP. Let's say for the sake of argument that we do decide to use PGP somehow to interface with IAX or SIP for encryption purposes. I would venture to say that probably half the Asterisk installations (I'm not talking about such projects as [EMAIL PROTECTED] here) reside in the commercial domain. None of these installations would be allowed to use PGP, unless a license costing hundreds or thousands of dollars were purchased for each install. Where does that leave us? Where does it leave Digium? Sorry to be pedantic, but mixing free and non-free software is not going to work, from both a legal standpoint and a practical one. -- Joey Kelly < Minister of the Gospel | Linux Consultant > http://joeykelly.net "I may have invented it, but Bill made it famous." --- David Bradley, the IBM employee that invented CTRL-ALT-DEL
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