On Mon, Aug 16, 2010 at 11:08 AM, Ray Van Dolson <rvandol...@esri.com>wrote:

> On Mon, Aug 16, 2010 at 08:57:19AM -0700, Joerg Schilling wrote:
> > "C. Bergström" <codest...@osunix.org> wrote:
> >
> > > > I absolutely guarantee Oracle can and likely already has
> dual-licensed
> > > > BTRFS.
> > > No.. talk to Chris Mason.. it depends on the linux kernel too much
> > > already to be available under anything, but GPLv2
> >
> > If he really believes this, then he seems to be missinformed about legal
> > background.
> >
> > The question is: who wrote the btrfs code and who owns it.
> >
> > If Oracle pays him for writing the code, then Oracle owns the code and
> can
> > relicense it under any license they like.
> >
> > Jörg
>
> I don't think anyone is arguing that Oracle can relicense their own
> copyrighted code as they see fit.
>
> The real question is, WHY would they do it?  What would be the business
> motivation here?  Chris Mason would most likely leave Oracle, Red Hat
> would hire him and fork the last GPL'd version of btrfs and Oracle
> would have relegated itself to a non-player in the Linux filesystem
> space...
>
> So, yes, they can do it if they want, I just think they're not THAT
> stupid. :)
>
>
>
Or, for all you know, Chris Mason's contract has a non-compete that states
if he leaves Oracle he's not allowed to work on any project he was a part of
for five years.

The "business motivation" would be to set the competition back a decade.


--Tim
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