The short answer is YES!

It pretty much all depends if you do it correctly or not.  Here are two
really useful links:
http://www.fsf.org/licensing/licenses/lgpl.html (The actual LGPL text, which
is a really long read)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LGPL (Wikipedia gives a short description of
how you can and can't use LGPLed code)
http://www.gnu.org/licenses/license-list.html (pay special attention to the
Introduction where it say who to e-mail if you have questions)

The way I understand it, the LGPL, unlike the GPL, can be linked by software
not licensed under the same license.  So you can't just take a piece of the
library and insert it into your program.  What you can do, however, is ship
a binary version of your program linked to a binary version of the library,
but you will still need to offer your customers access to the library's
code, not your program's code, if they request.

If you're not aware of this, both the GPL and LGPL explicitly allow you to
charge for any changes you make to the code, as long as you offer the code
for the price of distribution.  Ubuntu, for example, does this.  They ship
their binary CD for free (even though they could charge for it) and charge
$1.95 for the source CD.

Hope this helps!  Don't forget to check those links.

Stefan
_______________________________________________
Discuss-gnustep mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss-gnustep

Reply via email to