On Tuesday, June 28, 2016 21:41:20 Robin Gareus wrote:
> > That commercial exception, being ( snipped and quoted for the sake of
> > pedantism ),
> > 
> > '..under the GNU GPL with the exception that USAGE of the source code,
> > libraries and applications *FOR*  COMMERCIAL HARDWARE OR SOFTWARE
> > PRODUCTS IS NOT ALLOWED without prior written permission..'
> 
> GPL section 6 says
> 
> "You may not impose any further restrictions on the recipients' exercise
> of the rights granted herein."
> 
> So how does that work out?
> 
> That additional commercial exception contradicts the GPL on which it is
> based on and as result LS does not have a license. It is fully copyrighted.
> 
> It could become an new license: GPL without section 6 but with that
> exception added instead. Then again this is at odds since one is not
> allowed to modify the GPL itself. You can get around that by calling it
> the LinuxSampler-License and not mention the GPL at all.

Robin, please understand that this issue had been discussed over and over 
again on this list. So please refer to the list archive on this one. You are 
really not adding anything new on this topic and this has also been discussed 
with several people of the FSF before.

> As side-note, generally source-code header license for individual files
> trumps the license file from the collection. A quick grep shows that the
> source itself has a GPLv2 boilerplate with no commercial exception
> (unless I've missed some).
> 
> So if one were to take the individual source files and re-roll them into
> a new archive... ?!

Wrong. Neither are all files of LinuxSampler's sources pre-headed with a GPL 
intro text, nor would this action be legitimate. If you missed it, have a 
closer look at the source files.

And in the end: You know the terms under which LinuxSampler is released, its 
clearly and prominently written on the website, on binary installers, in the 
README file of LinuxSampler's sources and even on Wikipedia. So even if all 
source files were GPL pre-headed (which is not the case), then your suggestion 
would be a conscious disregard of our release terms.

CU
Christian

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