On Thu, Apr 23, 2009 at 1:25 PM, Marc Schwartz <marc_schwa...@me.com> wrote: > On Apr 23, 2009, at 11:47 AM, Stavros Macrakis wrote: >> >> All that being said, the entity that must enforce these conditions is >> not the FSF, but the copyright owner, in this case the R Foundation... >> bundler. So it would be useful to know what the R Foundation's >> position is....
> Actually, the R Foundation has done what it is obligated to do, which is to > describe the license under which R is made available. I did not say that the R Foundation was obligated to give advice. I said that it is up to the R Foundation to decide what cases it cares about, and it would be "useful to know" what that position is. > To ask the R Foundation for anything further is to ask them to render a legal > opinion, which is not in their expertise to offer. No, it is asking them what their *policy* is. Their policy may or may not be enforceable.... > It is up to the prospective third party developer of an application that is > to use R to consult with lawyers to determine what *THEIR* obligations are > if they should elect to proceed. Yes, this is true. But it is also true that if (for example) the R Foundation says officially that it interprets GPL to allow distributing proprietary packages along with R, then that is the interpretation that matters, since the R Foundation (not the FSF) is the copyright holder. > At this level, it is really pretty simple and a lot of these things are > covered in the GPL FAQs, including the reporting of violations. The GPL FAQs are the FSF's interpretation. The R Foundation is not obliged to have the same interpretation, and of course the FSF cannot enforce licenses given by the R Foundation. -s ______________________________________________ R-devel@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel