BOSTON, Massachusetts, USA—Friday, June 29, 2007—The Free Software
Foundation (FSF) today released version 3 of the GNU General Public License
(GNU GPL), the world's most popular free software license.

"Since we founded the free software movement, over 23 years ago, the free
software community has developed thousands of useful programs that respect
the user's freedom. The programs are in the GNU/Linux operating system, as
well as personal computers, telephones, Internet servers, and more. Most of
these programs use the GNU GPL to guarantee every user the freedom to run,
study, adapt, improve, and redistribute the program," said Richard Stallman,
founder and president of the FSF.

Version 3 of the GNU GPL strengthens this guarantee, by ensuring that users
can modify the free software on their personal and household devices, and
granting patent licenses to every user. It also extends compatibility with
other free software licenses and increases international uniformity.

Jeremy Allison, speaking on behalf of the Samba team, states that they see
the new license as "a great improvement on the older GPL," and that it is "a
necessary update to deal with the new threats to free software that have
emerged since version 2 of the GPL."

The warm embrace of much of the community should come as no surprise, for
the license is the final result of an unprecedented drafting process that
has seen four published drafts in eighteen months. These were the basis for
a discussion that included thousands of comments from the public. This
feedback, along with input from committees representing the public and
private sectors, and legal advice from the Software Freedom Law Center, was
used in writing the text of GPL version 3.

"By hearing from so many different groups in a public drafting process, we
have been able to write a license that successfully addresses a broad
spectrum of concerns. But even more importantly, these different groups have
had an opportunity to find common ground on important issues facing the free
software community today, such as patents, tivoization, and Treacherous
Computing," said the Foundation's executive director, Peter Brown.

Tivoization and Treacherous (aka, "Trusted") Computing are schemes to
prevent users from utilizing modified or alternate software. The former
simply blocks modified software from running; the latter enables web sites
to refuse to talk to modified software. Both are typically used to impose
malicious features such as Digital Restrictions Management (DRM). GPL
version 3 does not restrict the features of a program; in particular, it
does not prohibit DRM. However, it prohibits the use of tivoization and
Treacherous Computing to stop users from changing the software. Thus, they
are free to remove whatever features they may dislike.

Karl Berry, long-time GNU developer and Texinfo maintainer, believes that
"the GPL is the fundamental license that ties the free software community
together, and version 3 does an excellent job of updating the license to the
present-day computing reality." Elated by the new patent clause, he bemoans
software patents as "a scourge on our cooperative efforts."

Over fifteen GNU programs will be released under the new license today, and
the entire GNU Project will follow suit in the coming months. The FSF will
also encourage adoption of the license through education and outreach
programs. "A lot of time and effort went into this license. Now free
programs must adopt it so as to offer their users its stronger protection
for their freedom," Stallman said.

The final license is published at http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html
http://www.fsf.org/news/gplv3_launched
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