>I read the LGPL terms here: >http://www.opensource.org/licenses/lgpl-license.php
>I would like to use an LGPL library for a commercial (and not open >source) program I am writing. The primary difference between the GPL and LGPL is that you can use it in commercial projects. This is not correct, both the GPL and the LGPL can be used in commercial products. All free software licenses allow this, it is one of important freedoms, and if this is not allowed it makes the license non-free. >My question is: Under such circumstances, will I be obliged by the >license to make the source code of *my program* ( = "trade >secret") available to the customer? No. The LGPL has a few basic tenets: 1) Any changes to the library itself is subject to GPL terms. >If so, how is LPGL different from GPL? See above. The above is incorrect. The Lesser GPL and the GPL only differ in what can be linked with. A LGPL library can be used by GPL-incompatibly licensed programs, the same is not true for a GPL library, since it becomes a deriviate work of the library. Cheers _______________________________________________ gnu-misc-discuss mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnu-misc-discuss
