Re: Dual-Licensing Linux Kernel with GPL V2 and GPL V3

From: Rob Landley
Date: Thu Jun 14 2007 - 19:18:11 EST


On Thursday 14 June 2007 11:44:07 Bernd Paysan wrote:
> On Thursday 14 June 2007 16:08, Alan Milnes wrote:
> > Agreed - if you want to take my work you are welcome as long as you
> > contribute back your changes. That's the deal that GPL2 enforces and
> > why it has been so successful.
>
> That may be a side effect of the GPL, but it's actually not how the GPLv2
> works (nor is it the intention). "Contribute back" means upstream. There's
> no such provision in the GPLv2, you contribute only downstream. And there
> are cases where you don't need to contribute at all.

And the Linux kernel community has been familiar with this situation all
along. It's the bargain the kernel developers struck with each other a
decade and a half ago.

Now the FSF is coming along and being Darth Vader: "I am altering the bargain.
Pray I don't alter it any further."

> I think this above explains fairly well the "misunderstandings" that are
> appearing here. The GPL is not reflective (tit-for-tat), it's transient. If
> there's a loop in the transient propagation, it becomes reflective through
> the loop, but not by itself. This was the case in GPLv1, is the case in
> GPLv2, and will be the case in GPLv3.

That's not specifically a limitation of the GPL, that's a limitation of
copyright law which forms the basis of the GPL. It covers distribution, not
usage.

GPLv2 eliminates the case where I have a modified binary I contributed to, but
can't see the source code of those modifications. This has the pragmatic
effect of greatly reducing forking in a project, such as the Emacs/Lucid
Emacs fork that inspired the "Emacs license" that became GPLv1.

Rob
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/