Dear Danese,

Without prejudice save as to costs

I am the author of the R library "data.table". I released data.table under the 
provisions of the General Public License (GPL). This email is to notify 
REvolution that we may be in dispute.  If we are in dispute then I am entitled 
to issue litigation proceedings against REvolution for breach of contract.

To establish if we are in fact in dispute, please answer the following : 

1. Does REvolution R Enterprise include the library data.table ?
2. Has REvolution R Enterprise been distributed yet, for example has REvolution 
sold a copy ?
3. If it was distributed, was it distributed under a GPL-compatible license ?

FSF guidance :  
http://www.fsf.org/licensing/licenses/gpl-faq.html#GPLInProprietarySystem

Notwithstanding a potential dispute on the basis above, please also answer the 
following :

4. Has REvolution distributed any program code, written in R or any other 
language or environment or otherwise, which uses the library data.table, for 
example by calling functions that are provided by data.table at run time ?
5. If so, was such program code distributed under a GPL compatible license ?
FSF guidance :
http://www.fsf.org/licensing/licenses/gpl-faq.html#IfInterpreterIsGPL  (3rd 
paragraph)
http://www.fsf.org/licensing/licenses/gpl-faq.html#IfLibraryIsGPL
http://www.fsf.org/licensing/licenses/gpl-faq.html#NFUseGPLPlugins

I am making every effort to agree with you that we are not in dispute.  I have 
several suggestions which may avoid dispute, for example you could remove 
data.table from REvolution R Enterprise. You could confirm that the aggregate 
work REvolution R Enterprise is released under a GPL-compatible license. There 
may well be other solutions you could suggest. You could decide to postpone 
distribution of REvolution R Enterprise until all potential disputes are 
resolved.  If I have not heard from you or your representatives within 21 days 
of today 26 April 2009 then I will instruct my legal representatives to 
establish whether there is a dispute. Alternatively you can confirm we are in 
dispute and I will start to accrue legal costs immediately thereon. Any such 
costs will themselves form part of the claim. I intend to be as open and 
forthcoming with you about costs as my lawyers permit me.

This potential dispute is between myself only and REvolution. You must engage 
with me directly by answering the questions above with respect to data.table. 
It is a matter for you whether you answer publicly, via your lawyers or 
privately to me.  It is my understanding that any other GPL'd R library owners 
is also entitled to establish, either now or in the future, whether they are 
also potentially in dispute with you on the same basis as above. There are up 
to 1,700 distinct R libraries, each of which could potentially generate 1,700 
claims of breach of contract on you. One of those is the R Foundation, who as 
license holder for the library "base" have stated they will make a public 
statement in due course. That is a matter for the R Foundation, and them alone. 
 In my potential dispute with you, under English law I have 6 years between the 
date of any as yet unknown breach of contract and the date by which I must 
serve notice on you and submit particulars of claim to the cou!
 rt.  My lawyers cannot start to draft particulars of claim until we have 
established we are actually in dispute.

I remind you of the contract by which you are bound by me of your distributing 
of my library, or your distributing of programs (yours or otherwise) which use 
my library :

Licensing FAQ page:    http://www.fsf.org/licenses/gpl-faq.html
Text of the GNU GPL:   http://www.fsf.org/copyleft/gpl.html
Text of the GNU LGPL:  http://www.fsf.org/copyleft/lgpl.html
FSF license list page: http://www.fsf.org/licenses/license-list.html 

I look forward to your response.

I have 5 further points to add, each of which may be relevant with respect to 
my potential dispute with you.

1.  NetworkSpaces (library 'nws')
This is very welcome. I look forward to using it and I look forward to seeing 
many other GPL'd libraries being distributed that use it. REvolution released 
nws under the GPL, the same license as data.table is released under. This is a 
material fact that may be relevant in our potential dispute. It will be 
difficult for REvolution to argue in court in defence of my claim, that either 
you do not agree with the FSF's GPL license, you do not agree with the FSF 
guidance, or you were not aware of the differences between GPL and LGPL, for 
example, since your firm has already relied on the GPL license to protect your 
library, and the CRAN repository as a method to impose the license. You would 
find it hard to argue that no contract has been signed with a wet signature for 
example, since you did not impose that requirement on R users for your own 
library 'nws'.  Your difficulty would be further compounded if you were 
yourself the claimant against another entity which had distributed !
 non-GPL work which used the library nws.

2.  SFLC
The guidance from the FSF on this matter is above. It goes further than your 
summary of SFLC's counsel.  As we are both holders of FSF licenses, I suggest 
we should both follow the FSF guidance as a standard. This would of course be a 
matter for our lawyers to establish in due course,  if it turns out we are in 
dispute.

3.  Precedent for CRAN package license status
The onus is on you to prove precedent, since your apparent claim of precedent 
would be your defence in the potential case against you from the R Foundation 
or indeed in my case against you. There are several steps required to prove 
precedent in my person opinion :
i.  You must prove that distribution actually took place. The existence of a 
package on CRAN does not prove it has been distributed. In the same way that 
the REvolution R Enterprise web page exists on your website does not prove you 
have distributed that product.  It is possible that there are packages on CRAN 
that no entity has ever downloaded. Such non-distributed packages could not 
breach R's GPL, regardless of their license status.
ii.  Then you must prove that the R Foundation knew about such distribution.  
The distribution may have taken place off-CRAN, or a host of other reasons.
iii.  Then you must prove that such distribution event did actually breach R's 
GPL license,  and that the R Foundation knew they would have been able to prove 
that.  However, the following guidance from the FSF would appear to suggest 
that any added restrictions can be removed by the user (the person using such 
package) anyway : 
http://www.fsf.org/licensing/licenses/gpl-faq.html#NoMilitary.  So there would 
be no breach of GPL in this instance even though the package author attempted 
to add restrictions.
iv.  Then you must prove that the R Foundation did not, and can not in the 
future, bring legal action against the particular distribution occurrence. 
Under English law a claimant has 6 years from the date of breach of contract in 
which to file particulars of claim with the court.  The R Foundation may well 
have already been taking action.  Nobody knows other than the R Foundation.  It 
could take a long time before the R Foundation is able to clarify their 
position. I see no rush.

Once you had proved each and every point i-iv above, the particular details of 
such proved precedent would apply, and those only.  So for example, you might 
be able to end up being allowed to submit an R library to CRAN with a 
potentially GPL-incompatible license, just like the others you claim set 
precedent, but that would be all.  As far as I am aware, for a package to be 
accepted on CRAN it must include all its source code, regardless of its license 
file.  That may or may not be acceptable to any potential commercial strategy 
you are proposing.

To labour this point, you appear to claim that precedent has been set that 
allows you to bundle R along with GPL'd add-on packages along with your own 
non-GPL'd packages, and distribute such bundle under a non-GPL license, 
distributed off-CRAN.  You also or alternatively perhaps claim that precedent 
has been set that allows you to distribute your own proprietary R library 
'foreach' and 'iterators' using a non-CRAN distribution mechanism.  Such 
precedent claims are frankly laughable in my personal opinion.

One reason your potential defence of legal precedent with respect to the R 
Foundation's potential claim on you, involves me, is that in a future potential 
dispute with you about a future potential package I might release under GPL, 
you might claim in your defence that I have created president by not issuing 
proceedings against you now. Therefore your potential claim of defence with the 
R Foundation mean that I would be advised to start proceedings against you now, 
to avert a similar potential claim of defence in the future. This is 
notwithstanding the fact that such claims of legal precedent in defence of your 
particular potential breach are laughable anyway.  Then you must consider all 
other authors of R packages whose packages you intend to bundle, and you have 
the same difficulty with them.  In short, your claims of precedent in defence 
of R Foundation potential dispute with you, may potentially create a case for 
legal costs incurred now by the set of distinct owners of t!
 he apx 1,700 package authors who will require to consult legal advisers as to 
their positions, as to the best way to avoid compromising their entitlements 
due to inaction now.  I advise you to act swiftly therefore.

4. Whether or not I felt legally obligated to release data.table under the GPL, 
because it was or was not derived from the R library "base", or any other point 
of FSF guidance, is irrelevant to my potential dispute with you regarding 
data.table. The fact is I released data.table under the GPL.

5. Denise has stated to be a long-time supporter of the FSF and has served on 
the board of the Open Source Initiative since 2001. In what manner does support 
of FSF extend?  Holding such affiliations may create a conflict of interest 
with regard to my potential claim against you. It is feasible, if we are in 
dispute of course, that my lawyers could at a future date ask Denise to 
relinquish either the FSF affiliation or employment by you.  I had already 
communicated with the FSF for example before the email from Denise, so you may 
be privy to such communication, potentially causing a conflict or interest.

6. On the 22nd April 2009 at 00:30 hours I posted item 4 to the "GPL and 
ParallelR" thread on the R Evolution Forum. This item has not yet appeared on 
your Forum. Why is this?  I refer to the post in which I said I was moving the 
thread to r-devel.

7. The apparent lack of court judgements with regard to the GPL license is not 
in my opinion a weakness of any potential legal action against you.  On the 
contrary. The measure of the success of the GPL license, and the FSF's 
guidance, should in my opinion be the number of disputes that have been avoided 
due to the GPL license provisions being abided to thus far.  Perhaps reasonable 
lower and upper bounds could be put on this number, using R of course.

8. Whether or not the GPL is an advantageous strategy for either the R 
community or REvolution is a matter of debate for everyone involved.  Such 
debate is however irrelevant to my potential dispute with you.  We must first 
establish that all parties will abide by the FSF's guidance on GPL.   Once that 
is established we can move on to discuss re-licensing, or dual-licensing to 
LGPL. I would again refer you to the FSF's guidance on that also: 
http://www.fsf.org/licensing/licenses/why-not-lgpl.html.  Whether or not I have 
the option to license data.table under LGPL may or may not depend on the 
license of the base package to which data.table in turn links to.   It may be 
relevant in my potential dispute with you whether or not your packages 
'foreach' and 'iterators' link to base,  if you potentially make new claims of 
precedent in that regard in the future for example.

The opinions and statements in this email are my own, and my own only.   For 
completeness, I will repeat in public that I support REvolution and have every 
respect for all your members of staff.  I consider myself a potential source of 
revenue for you. You must however abide by the provisions of the GPL license.

Yours sincerely,
Matthew


P.S. If you are an interested 3rd party reading the letter above and are now 
worried about using R due to fear of a potential litigation against you, then 
the following 2 links should allay your fears.  I am unable to think of 
anything that could be more clear than this.
http://www.fsf.org/licensing/licenses/gpl-faq.html#InternalDistribution
http://www.fsf.org/licensing/licenses/gpl-faq.html#GPLRequireSourcePostedPublic

P.P.S. There are several nodes in the previous threads that I could respond to 
individually. It would take too long to do so. I believe I have read everything 
on the threads (thanks to all) and tried to respond accordingly to any 
outstanding point above.  For example point 3.iii may help with several points 
raised.



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