On 6/18/07, Alexandre Oliva <aoliva@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On Jun 18, 2007, Linus Torvalds <torvalds@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> I just want software back. I think it is *wrong* for me to ask for
> anything else. It's literally my personal "moral choice": I think the
> hardware manufacturers need to make their _own_ choices when it comes to
> _their_ designs.
> - I think that *technical*quality* is more important than *quantity*.
This argument fails to make the point you're trying to make.
you trade the potential contributions of all those users for the
contributions of tivoizers, apparently assuming that all tivoizers
would simply move away from the community, taking their future
contributions away from your community, rather than moving to a
position in which you'd get not only the contributions from the
company itself, but also from all their users
and you say "oh, I don't care about quantity, I care about quality",
as if this somehow related with the above.
Just do the math. Hypothetically, Linux goes GPLv3, withoutBad for us, bad for users.
permission to tivoize. TiVo has to decide among:
- switching to another kernel, no further contributions from them
- sticking with old version, no further usable contributions from themBad for us, bad for users.
- switching to ROM, still the same contributions from TiVoBad for users.
- no more tivoization, contributions from TiVo and users
So, you see, in no case do you get more contributors while at the same
time losing TiVo's quality contributions.
> In the GPLv3 world, we have already discussed in this thread how you can
> follow the GPLv3 by making the TECHNICALLY INFERIOR choice of using a ROM
> instead of using a flash device.
Yes. This is one option that doesn't bring any benefits to anyone.
It maintains the status quo for users and the community, but it loses
the ability for the vendor to upgrade, fix or otherwise control the
users. Bad for the vendor.