Lawrence Rosen is also in agreement on this point (regarding the GPL v2 specifically).
It is revocable at the will of the grantor, at any time.
(He writes that if a licensee-contributor was to sue a grantor, then would be a good time to unilaterally rescind: disposing of the matter entirely)

The contention that a copyright license is only terminable is traditionally usually true in practice; but not because such is declared by the Copyright Statute (such is not). It is because, in practice, those terms are supported by consideration. Thus the licensee has payed the grantor for those very terms to be in effect.

In the case of most users and most developers of the linux-kernel this is not the case.

In-fact The very principal that, in the real world, precipitated the widespread adoption of linux:
that no consideration is paid for receipt of the program.

The GPL v2 is not supported by consideration.
This is its strength.
And it is not something that can be disclaimed after the fact.

The drafter of version 2 of the GPL did, indeed, make an error in drafting. He was, perhaps, familiar mostly with commercial copyright licenses. The foundation of the GPL does not rest on any contemplation of quid-pro-quo or contract theories however; it is on the simple declaration in the Copyright Statute that copyright is alienable in all ways property is. The GPL v2 is similar to a property license, and not a traditional commercial copyright license.

On 2018-10-26 18:31, Eben Moglen wrote:
On Friday, 26 October 2018, visionsofal...@redchan.it wrote:

  You are conflating case law dealing with commercial software and
non-gratuitous licenses with the present situation, which would likely
  be a case of first-impression in nearly any jurisdiction.

I think the best procedure would be for me to publish my analysis and
for you then to tell me what is wrong with it.  What you say here
sounds like what a lawyer might say, but isn't.  I have been teaching
this stuff for about thirty years, so if I am conflating or confusing
anything I will be grateful for help in seeing my mistake.

The rule for gratuitous licenses is that they are revocable at the will
  of the grantor.

That's not actually "the rule."  It sounds like it might be the rule,
but it so happens that it's not.  When I have given the explanation as
I have learned, taught and depended on it, you will be able to show me
what I am wrong about.

  Raymond Nimmer (God rest his soul) was in agreement on this point,
  vis-a-vis the GPL and similar licenses.

You have your Nimmers confused.  The primary author of the treatise
Nimmer on Copyright (a book about the law, not in itself an authority)
was Melville Nimmer.  The treatise is continued by his son, David, a
fine lawyer with whom I do from time to time politely disagree about
something.  Ray Nimmer is quite another person.

Eben

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