Alexander Terekhov wrote:
The GPL is not a tool for freedom, it is a tool of control, and I argue that its overall effect on the art of software development as a whole has been more destructive than it has been beneficial.
Even if that were true, that's fine - it is not the goal of the FSF to be beneficial to software developers, so if the GPL has been detrimental, the FSF does not care. > nor has it diminished the freedoms of the Apache developers. The FSF is not concerned with the freedom of developers, so the effect of the license on them is irrelevant to the FSF.
requires the one incorporating the software to also GPL their
> product. Who is that protecting? It is protecting the person who receives the combined program.
Or is it harming the user who has found a possibly excellent
> piece of software that they can't use because its license will > virally infect their own efforts? That's not a user. That's a programmer. The FSF doesn't care about programmers.
In fact, negotiating a commercial license with the author of a GPL product is damn near impossible
To the FSF, that's a bonus.
So what purpose then does the GPL serve other than being a restriction
> on the ability of a company or other body that values their own privacy? It allows a software user to run, read, modify, and share the program he is using. Privacy of a program is antithetical to the views of the FSF, so if the GPL helps prevent such a thing, that too is a bonus.
if you don't want to release your source, ask for permission not to.
The ability to not release source is the ability to deny users the freedom to read and modify programs. That is antithetical to the beliefs of the FSF, so they will certainly not support such a thing. It is equally antithetical to many, but not all, free software developers. There are many software projects which began with licenses that were not compatible with the GPL and then switched. Mozilla and Java are two huge examples. There is clear community pressure in favor of licensing code under the GPL. That's because under the GPL, everyone benefits. Why would the community get together in support of helping someone deny them code? _______________________________________________ gnu-misc-discuss mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnu-misc-discuss
