On 26-02-2017 19:48, Carsten Agger wrote:
If our business models never involve releasing under a proprietary
license, we're not contributing to the proprietary software economy,
and that's that.
Acturally, we are contributing indirectly if an open source library is
used in proprietary software.
Honestly, I think we should focus speculations on business model on
providing software under free licenses. For that reason, I'm
personally against the selling of exceptions.
Yes, we need to focus on how to finance open software. But to me, the
word "business model" is at odds with the ideal of free software.
Whether an open source project needs funding, and whether a project is
able to attract funding, is two different things. For example, some
projects might raise money by selling support or custom features while
other projects are unable to do so.
Software libraries can make money by selling license exceptions, but
have no need for the money. That's why I want to redirect these money to
some other projects that need them, but apparently we can't agree on how
to do this.
Another thing: As a developer, I think the GPL is too restrictive a
license for libraries. If I write a very small, nearly trivial,
application based on a given library, I like having the option of
placing it in the public domain or releasing it under the two-clause
BSD license or any other free license that's not the GPL. For that
reason, I believe I'd always place any library I write myself under
the LGPL or similar.
I agree. But the LGPL works only for dynamic libraries (.dll or .so)
because it has a requirement that the library can be relinked.
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