On Dec 11, 2018, at 2:54 AM, License Management Team
<[email protected]> wrote:
> We are in the planning stages of a proposed upgrade from Windows 7 to Windows
> 10 Operating System, with the intention of deploying on physical devices and
> also on a new Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI) solution in select areas
> of our organisation.
> In order that we continue to adhere to the licensing terms and any compliance
> requirements going forward, we would request that you could confirm the
> following answers to the below question set in relation to the following
> Wiresharkapplication.
>
> Wireshark 1.1
Is "1.1" a release number or is it just a section number?
If it's a release number, then please note that
1) it was a development release, not an official release;
2) it came out over 10 years ago:
https://www.wireshark.org/news/20080914.html
about 7 years before Windows 10 came out, so we can't guarantee that
it'll work on Windows 10, and will probably not have any time to test it on
Windows 10.
As for licensing terms, Wireshark is licensed under the GNU General Public
License, Version 2:
https://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/gpl-2.0.html
That license
1) doesn't care whether you're running on Windows 7, Windows 10,
Windows Vista, Linux, Solaris, FreeBSD, macOS, Tru64 UNIX, ..., so there are
*no* licensing restrictions that would forbid running on Windows 10;
2) doesn't care whether you're running on a physical or virtual
machine, so there are *no* licensing restrictions that would forbid running on
a virtual desktop;
3) doesn't care how it's distributed, so using AppSense shouldn't
impose any licensing requirements;
4) doesn't care what you're using it for, so there are no special
licensing issues if you're using it for testing compatibility, analyzing
network problems, trying to catch a cheating spouse or partner (yes, somebody
*did* use it for that purpose once, although I can't find the post where it was
mentioned), etc..
In addition, Wireshark isn't a commercial application, it's a free-software
application ("free as in beer", as in "we don't charge money for it" and "free
as in speech", as in "if you've downloaded it you can give it away, run it
wherever you want, get the source code and modify it however you want, etc."
with the only restrictions being those imposed by the GPL v2, e.g. if you give
somebody a binary copy you have to make the source code used to generate that
binary copy available to them - read the entire license at the link above for
details), so there are no commercial implications (other than maybe "don't
violate our trademarks on the name Wireshark, the shark fin image, etc.") for
what you do to Wireshark (again, other than "if you provide the binary to
somebody, they need to be able to get the source" - see the GPL v2, again).
And as for the current version of Wireshark, 2.6.5, it seems to work on Windows
10, although you'll probably need to install Npcap:
https://nmap.org/npcap/
rather than WinPcap if you want to capture network traffic.
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