ROFL. Al Viro wrote: > > On Thu, Jun 21, 2007 at 06:39:07AM -0300, Alexandre Oliva wrote: > > Here's an idea that just occurred to me, after all the discussions > > about motivations, tit-for-tat, authors' wishes and all. > > > > If GPLv3 were to have a clause that permitted combination/linking with > > code under GPLv2, this wouldn't be enough for GPLv3 projects to use > > Linux code, and it wouldn't be enough for Linux code to use GPLv3 > > projects. That's because GPLv2 would still demand all code to be > > licensed under GPLv2, and GPLv3 wouldn't permit this. > > > > However, if GPLv3 had a permission to combine/link with code under > > GPLv2, *and* Linux (and any other projects interested in mutual > > compatibility) introduced an additional permission to combine/link > > with code under GPLv3 (or even GPLv3+, constrained by some condition > > if you will), then: > > > > - the kernel Linux could use code from GPLv3 projects > > .. and inherit GPLv3 additional restrictions. No. > > > - GPLv3 projects could use code from Linux > > Oh, rapture! How could one object against such a glorious outcome? > > > - each copyright holder would still get to enforce the terms s/he > > chose for his/her own code > > .. except for that pesky "no added restrictions" part, but hey, who > cares? > > > If you were to permit compatibility with GPLv3+ (rather than GPLv3), > > would you constrain it? Would something like: > > > > as long as the later version grants each licensee the same > > permissions as GPLv2, except for constraining permissions that would > > enable one licensee to deny other licensees the exercise of the > > permissions granted by both licenses > > .. because it's For The Benefit Of User Freedoms!!! > > No. Permission denied. And I don't know of any suckers who would buy that > and hadn't been already hooked by FSF peddlers already. > > If somebody wants to dual-license their code, they can do it just fine. > If somebody wants to dual-license *others* code, they can go and play > with themselves until they reach RMS-level clarity of vision. > > -
regards, alexander. -- "Live cheaply," he said, offering some free advice. "Don't buy a house, a car or have children. The problem is they're expensive and you have to spend all your time making money to pay for them." -- Free Software Foundation's Richard Stallman: 'Live Cheaply' _______________________________________________ gnu-misc-discuss mailing list gnu-misc-discuss@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnu-misc-discuss