On Sun, Nov 14, 2010 at 6:07 PM, Dan Eicher <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Sun, Nov 14, 2010 at 4:56 PM, Alex Combas <[email protected]> > wrote: > > > > The current situation with blender is that developers are being told how > > they must license their > > code, and they have very little freedom in this regard since it is really > > just two options: > > > > a) make your code open source > > b) keep your code top secret forever > > > > That does not sound very exciting or encouraging to me. > > > > Yep, that's your cost for 'free' because, you know, there's no such thing > as > a free lunch. > > Even if there were some pragmatic push to change the license I'm not too > sure how much the folks who paid actual money to 'free' the code would > appreciate such a move. If it weren't for them there would be zero freedom > to even use much less hack on blender. > > Given the virtual impossibility of ever moving away from the GPL I'd say > they got exactly what they paid for. > > No, they didn't get what they paid for, they made a mistake due to ignorance. I believe that "GPL with exception for extensions" is what everyone actually wanted, but they just didn't realize it at the time and now it is too late. Many developers do not actually understand just how restrictive and controlling the GPL is they think "Oh freedom, thats great" but then they find out later that the "freedom" Stallman is talking about is not freedom for developers, its freedom for code. The GPL forces developers to free the code. Personally, I don't like anyone forcing anyone to do anything, and I think it is more important that people have freedom than code have freedom. > Dan > _______________________________________________ > Bf-committers mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.blender.org/mailman/listinfo/bf-committers > _______________________________________________ Bf-committers mailing list [email protected] http://lists.blender.org/mailman/listinfo/bf-committers
