On 1/9/07, Atul Nene <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Thanks Sridhar for clarifying further. When I said 'give back to owner', I meant 'give back to community' since, my understanding is that GPLed software ceases to belong a person and starts belonging to the community.
The GPL (and other licenses, actually) deal with copyright, and not ownership. If you create a work of authorship and license it to someone for use in any way, you are transferring copyright, not authorship. Under the GPL (v2), you transfer the copyright in the broadest sense with only one limitation that further distribution of the original work or its derivative should involve the same transfer of copyright to all recipients without discrimination. There may or may not be a community involved in your distributing GPL'd software, e.g. you have given it to your girlfriend's brother. What he may or may not do with the software / code is his own decision / problem, and you as the author need not be concerned unless the work or its derivative is redistributed, but then again it depends on how serious you are with your girlfriend. Another thing to be noted in relation to the GPL is that you, as the author, are completely Free to parallely distribute your work of authorship under a different license, say the BSD license or the Apache license or the Microsoft EULA (modified of course), but again that's a question of business, ethics, and politics. Caveat, if modifications of your work find their work back to you under the GPL, you cannot co-mingle them in your distribution that is under a non-GPL compliant license. Yes, it is a zoo out there. -- ______________________________________________________________________ Pune GNU/Linux Users Group Mailing List: ([email protected]) List Information: http://plug.org.in/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/plug-mail Send 'help' to [EMAIL PROTECTED] for mailing instructions.
