On Oct 3, 2012 9:33 AM, "Patrick" <[email protected]> wrote:
> It's still in the planning stage but once complete, I do not want it to
be sold but to be free as in beer forever. If I understand things correctly
to be a FSF approved licence, the licence must allow for resale, I won't
allow this. Parents of autistic kids are already under enormous stress and
most won't end up knowing there was a free as in beer alternative.
parisites will swoop in an screw over the parents by sellign them the
software.
>

Since you are distributing the code yourself you can offer the binary and
sources for free. If a competitor wants to sell your software it is *still*
available from your own website.

You're trying to clamp down on competition and that can't be done with the
gpl.

The nice thing is that any competitors will have to offer an enticing
value-add to the product and make the source code for that available to
others under the gpl. Or they have to work really hard and spend money on a
sales team to convince parents to buy their version of your software (of
course their version will be the same as your software, it would be too
expensive to both enhance the product and also sell it).

There's no reason to be fearful of this.

> I also have a project for controlling scientific instrumentation and
crunching data. It's a for profit venture.
>
> I need a revenue model. I could give it away and offer paid support or
sell it and also provide paid support.
>

Right and the FSF has recommended that for decades because it's a good
option and it does bring in some cash.

> I want permanent credit for my work with the scientific instrument
control project. If someone else uses the code i want them to have to
display to the user that I was the one who started the project at a
specific font and for a specific time period. This way if other companies
want to offer paid support, the end users will still know that I was the
one that wrote it and i can provide better support for it. If RMS did
something like this I think he would be much better off now.
>
> Is there any licences that could meet one or more of these objectives?
>

You will be credited for the software you create in the copyrights file or
the license file or in every source code file. If you use the gpl then any
changes someone makes have to be licensed under the gpl as well.

The only way to guarantee that your name will appear prominently in the
user interface is to use a different license when dealing with businesses.

Most businesses will not like the idea of selling or modifying gpl software
so they'll be open to paying for a different license to be used and in that
contract you can include the clause that credit to you must be displayed in
the user interface.

Hope that helps and makes you reconsider not choosing the gpl!
-Rudolf

Reply via email to