[nycbug-talk] lame...real lame Andy
Bob Ippolito
bob
Wed Jan 12 14:47:03 EST 2005
On Jan 12, 2005, at 14:17, Aron Roberts wrote:
> On Jan 12, 2005, at 2:13 PM, Marc Spitzer wrote:
>
>> On Wed, 12 Jan 2005 09:47:37 -0500 (EST), Dru
>> <dlavigne6 at sympatico.ca> wrote:
>>>
>>> Bruce then goes on to explain the intent and ramifications of the
>>> BSD and
>>> GPL licenses. The intent of the GPL is to prevent open source code
>>> from
>>> becoming commercialized (www.gnu.org/philosophy/shouldbefree.html).
>>> This
>>> is the part that confused me, seeing all of the big software
>>> interests are
>>> embracing GPL code left write and center. Whereas, the BSD license
>>> doesn't
>>> place restrictions on what happens to the code i.e. it can stay open
>>> source or end up in a commercial entity.
>>
>> The gpl, IMO, is anti innovation as far as software goes. Explain
>> this to the VC/shareholders:
>>
>> 1: you used a gpled library in your commercial app.
>> 2: one of your customers figures it out
>> 3: said customer demands all your code, using a lawyer
>> 4: puts it up on sourceforge, along with his own compiled windows
>> binaries
>> 5: it is your only product and sales have droped off by +90%
>>
>>
>>>
>>> Bruce then explains how history is repeating itself: "The GPL is well
>>> suited for use as a commercial marketing weapon, particularly by
>>> hardware or
>>> service companies which, similar to IBM in the late 1950s and 1960s,
>>> profit if
>>> the cost of software is driven to zero...zero-cost software can be
>>> used to
>>> undermine the software of a competitor and can contribute to
>>> monopolistic
>>> behaviour. It can drive software companies out of business. It is
>>> unclear if
>>> the current generation of open source software will have this effect
>>> or not".
>>>
>>
>> the gpl is designed to destroy the value of software and it does a
>> very good job of doing it.
>>
>>> If this is the case, it is certainly ironic that Stallman's vision
>>> of the
>>> ideal license is being used to promote the commercial entities he is
>>> so
>>> strongly opposed to.
>>
>> If you look at RMS's ideal world he was a comunist, you own nothing.
> Correct me if I am wrong, but unless you modify the library you should
> be able to link against whatever you want with no repercussions from
> the GPL. Even then you would only be required to share your changes to
> that library.
You are thinking of the LGPL. The GPL exhibits the described
properties. Consider yourself corrected :)
> I sure like the BSD license better however I am not sure that you are
> right in this case.
He is right!
-bob
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