david@xxxxxxx writes:
On Wed, 20 Jun 2007, Michael Poole wrote:
david@xxxxxxx writes:
this is very much NOT true. if you take the source the provide you can
compile a kernel that will run on the tivo, the only thing you have to
do (on some models) is to change the bios to skip the step that checks
if the kernel has been tampered with.
If we are opining whether Tivo provided complete source code for their
Linux kernel images, the requirement to change non-GPLed software as a
condition to exercise GPL-protected rights speaks for itself.
no, the GPL protected rights don't say anything about the hardware the
system runs on.
you are saying that the GPL now controls what the BIOS software is
allowed to do or not allowed to do.
Please retract that claim. I have said no such thing, and have
avoided saying anything that I thought might be misconstrued in that
direction.
To be absolutely clear: My complaints with Tivo as a hardware or BIOS
vendor are moral and pragmatic, not legal. My complaint with Tivo as
a distributor of Linux is what hinges on legal issues.
that's a seperate body of code that is in no way derived from the
linux kernel (even the anti-tampering functions would work equally
well with other Operating systems and are in no way linux
specific). it's no even loaded on the same media (the BIOS is in
flash/rom on the botherboard, the OS is on the hard drive)
and note that the software that is checked to make sure that it hasn't
been changed includes much more then the kernel. it checks the kernel
and the initrd.
Not legally relevant.
Out of curiosity, what do you have to do on models besides those? Are
newer models more or less restrictive in what they run? If newer
models are more restrictive, I think that also speaks to whether Tivo
thinks it is conveying complete source code.
newer models do tend to be more restrictive, but they also tend to
connect to more propriatary networks (satellite or cable)
What they connect to is also not relevant. That imples that because a
vendor has been issued or licensed patents, they are not obliged to
follow the GPL -- that the vendor has other obligations that supercede
the GPL's license claims. GPL section 7 addresses that situation.
Michael Poole-