Jacques,

        Based on what Matt sent, I'd say your in violation of their license.  You've 
distributed it internally.

Dick Goulet
Senior Oracle DBA
Oracle Certified 8i DBA 

-----Original Message-----
Sent: Friday, June 20, 2003 4:45 PM
To: Multiple recipients of list ORACLE-L


Thank you for the research.
When they say "Distribution for MySQL would mean more than one "copy" installed in a 
production environment", by production environment, they must mean a business.
For example I can use MySQL on my home computer to keep track of my record collection, 
and I can also recreate the same database on my wife's computer so that she can keep 
track of her CDs, all for free.
(I don't expect you to answer that! If I want to know for sure I can always ask MYSQL.)

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Matthew Zito [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 
> I figured the time had come to stop speculating about MySQL's 
> licensing
> policy and get the answer straight from the horse's mouth, as it were.
> So I contacted MySQL and posed a couple of scenarios to them. 
>  Here's my
> questions and their responses (my stuff is the quoted part):
> 
> "
> > in all of these examples, a non-GPLed application is being 
> described:
> >     
> >     1) A web-based application for an internal or external audience
> >     running with mysql as the backend only?
> 
> If it is a web-based application that will be created and 
> distributed, a
> license is required. If it is an internally built and internally used
> application running on one server, a commercial license is 
> not required
> (more then one installation requires a license for each - it will be
> considered internal distribution). 
> >     
> >     2) A compiled win32 application installed on employee desktops 
> > that
> >     connects to a centralized mysql database for running queries?
> 
> As long as the database is not installed on each individual machine,
> only one license is required (unless it is an internally built
> application running on one server - it could be used for free).
> 
> 
> >     
> >     3) A compiled win32 application that installs mysql 
> locally on the
> >     user's machine?
> 
> A license would be required for each installation, it would be
> considered internal distribution.
> >     
> >     4) A web-based application where mysql has been 
> "distributed" to a
> >     number of database servers and is running on those database 
> > servers?
> >     
> >     The confusion seems to center around the word 
> "distribute".  What
> >     constitutes distribution of MySQL?  Thanks very much for your 
> > help.
> 
> Distribution for MySQL would mean more than one "copy" installed in a
> production environment, either internally or externally.
> 
> Also note that if an end user used MySQL with a 3rd party commercial
> application, a non-GPL commercial license of MySQL is required.
> "
> 
> So, that clears some things up for me, but this licensing policy does
> seem unnecessarily confusing.  
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