Hi :)
+1
"Hacking" is a term generally misused in the press and society at large.  The 
real meaning has nothing to do with illegal or destructive vandalism.  

My understanding is that people can take the code and add their own 
developments as long as they use a suitable licence for their result.  Such 
variants can't use the name LibreOffice or TDF and must make it easy to access 
the original source code for free.  If people request physical media such as 
Dvds or Cds with the code then reasonable charges can be made for the physical 
media itself and postage&packing, administration (and such) but the actual code 
itself must be free.  Even when people ask for physical media they need to be 
given a free link to the free download.  

I think if a company wants to make some in-house tweaks it is probably easier 
to write an Extension / Add-on instead of trying to mess with the main code and 
then worrying about upgrades.  Since an Extension is external to the main 
code-base it could be released as a proprietary add-on / Extension but that 
would miss out on the opportunity to make it easy for people to update if there 
were problems with the Extension.  

Any code that gets into the program that is allowed to be called LibreOffice 
has to pas rigorous QA at TDF involving alpha and beta-testing on hundreds of 
thousands (perhaps even millions) of real-world machines throughout the world.  

Many companies find it's worthwhile to add any changes they want into 
submissions to the TDF to improve the product for everyone else as well as 
themselves.  This way they get their code tested much more widely than they 
could feasably manage themselves.  On their own they would have to rely on 
testing done on a few virtualised/'perfect' machines and only a tiny number of 
bare-metal machines with a limited range of hardware.  Obviously they give-up 
any copyright and their code may end up getting tweaked or re-written but the 
advantages are huge and make it worthwhile in such a large project as 
LibreOffice. 

Companies such as Novell, RedHat, Google, Cannonical (of Ubuntu fame) and many 
others are involved in writing and using the code. 

Regards from
Tom :)


--- On Thu, 22/12/11, Cor Nouws <oo...@nouenoff.nl> wrote:

From: Cor Nouws <oo...@nouenoff.nl>
Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] Question Concerning your product
To: users@global.libreoffice.org
Cc: "Mike Watson" <ragnork...@hotmail.com>
Date: Thursday, 22 December, 2011, 8:07

Hi Mike,

Mike Watson wrote (22-12-11 02:08)

> I am considering downloading your product to avoid having to buy
> Microsoft Office.

Looks as a good idea to me :-)

> But I have a question about your product.  On your
> Features page you said that the LGPL public license could be hacked
> by the user.
> What does that mean?  Does it mean that anyone can hack
> it?

It means that each and every person having skills in the area of software 
developing, is able to modify the code and adapt the software... *however* this 
only on the machine he/she has access to. The software that is offered for 
download to you and others, can not be altered by random persons.
You and everyone else can send in code-contributions - in fact that is a highly 
encouraged and appreciated form of contributing and key to open source - but 
contributions are submitted to the source after review only. And of course by 
people that have received contribute-rights because of their work.

So ... 'hacking' in this sense is not related to what is actually 'cracking' - 
breaking in software/computers, which lately also is pointed to as hacking.

> Please reply whenever you can. Thank you for your time.

You're welcome!
Thanks for asking and I hope my explanation is clear enough. If not please 
write.
And I think that it's good also that we have a look at our website, in order to 
prevent future misunderstanding.

Regards,
Cor

PS - have added you as cc since you're not subscribed to the list or Gmane for 
this list.


--  - Cor
 - http://nl.libreoffice.org


-- For unsubscribe instructions e-mail to: users+h...@global.libreoffice.org
Problems? http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/
Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette
List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/global/users/
All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted


-- 
For unsubscribe instructions e-mail to: users+h...@global.libreoffice.org
Problems? http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/
Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette
List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/global/users/
All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted

Reply via email to