On Tue, Feb 14, 2006 at 02:00:13PM -0500, Tom Lane wrote:
> Stephen Frost <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > Has there been any actual test (ie: court case) of a piece of software
> > being released under an open source (BSD, GPL, whatever) license and
> > then the licensor revoking that and stopping everyone from distributing
> > the code?
> 
> AFAIK it's not possible to revoke privileges already granted.  The
> reason that Oracle's moves are potentially serious is that there is a
> fairly small developer base for the bits of software in question, and
> they could effectively lock up the knowledge needed to do anything
> useful (eg, by enforcing noncompete agreements that probably already
> exist for the employees of the companies they're buying).  Thus,
> even though the user communities of these packages have the legal right
> to maintain a GPL-license fork, they might be years away from having
> the technical competence to do anything very useful with them.  (Look
> at how long it took us to get far with the PG codebase after Berkeley
> handed it over.)  Plus there's the problem of re-coalescing the
> community around a new core team that doesn't exist ...
> 
>                       regards, tom lane
> 
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Not just non-compete agreements, but purchasing of employees with
the knowledge base is how it works.  That is what Informix did with
Illustra--it bought the engineers.  Sleepycat people are probably
tied up with golden handcuffs--corporate kink ;)

--elein
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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