Re: GPL V3 and Linux - Dead Copyright Holders

From: Emilio JesÃs GallegoArias
Date: Thu Feb 02 2006 - 12:39:45 EST


Linus Torvalds <torvalds@xxxxxxxx> writes:

> Besides, the people who inserted the DRM code explicitly gave you
> permission to modify it, so the whole point is moot. There's no
> "circumvention".

Yes, it is mostly clear, and indeed GPL3 seems a little bit over
engineered, but that doesn't mean that GPL2 could not have any
loopholes:

1. Release a kernel with builtin DRM for video. (For example HDCP [1])
Such DRM implementation is released under the GPL2 by copyright
holder A.

2. Distribute a modified kernel without DRM. Copyright holder A gave
you permission to do so, by the GPL2, everything is OK.

3. People can backup videos from copyright holder B using the modified
kernel.

4. Copyright holder B can sue you under the DMCA, for circumventing an
effective technological measure. It doesn't matter whatever license
copyright holder A gave you.

Regards,

Emilio

Footnotes:
[1] High-Bandwidth Digital Content Protection. Currently you would
never get a license for a GPL implementation, but it's used as an
hypothetical example.

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