Ian Hickson wrote:
> 
> On Thu, 16 Aug 2001, Frank Hecker wrote:
> >
> > JTK wrote:
> >> So what happens when somebody needs to be taken to court for
> >> infringing on the license?  Who's the plaintiff?
> >
> >   The copyright holder for the code which is the subject of the alleged
> > infringement. Again, IANAL, but my understanding is that the copyright
> > holder is normally the only person/entity who can sue for copyright
> > infringement.
> 
> This is why the Free Software Foundation ask that you reassign your
> copyright to them on any code that you contribute to their projects -- it
> makes the legal process of defending the GPL a lot easier.
> 
>    http://www.fsf.org/licenses/why-assign.html

Right, so why does AOL presumably *not* do that?  I can think of only a
few reasons:

1.  The MPL gives AOL more rights than the actual copyright holder.
2.  AOL is big enough that copyright doesn't really matter in this case;
if AOL sees an "abuse" (which apparently includes actions wholly in the
spirit of Free Software) and wants to go after it, they can and will do
so simply because of their almost limitless power.
3.  The MPL is in fact uninfringeable: anyone can do anything with any
code placed under it.

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