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Re: {debian-legal} Re: APSL 2.0



"M. Drew Streib" <dtype@dtype.org> writes:

> On Thu, Aug 07, 2003 at 11:10:34AM -0400, Brian T. Sniffen wrote:
>> out of networked environments.  If they succeed in promulgating these
>> ideas, they'll hinder growth of networked systems.  Perhaps a good way
>
> I could agree with you, except that networked systems can't really
> be hindered too much now. They are pretty much a given.

In that case, won't it hinder the use of APSL/Affero GPL licensed
software in networked environments?

> Apple isn't so much discriminating against a use model, as discriminating
> against _all_ use, in either a networked or distribution model, without
> distributing source. Think of it as discriminating against the 
> business model of 'service', rather than the use of networked software.
>
> They're simply cutting off the common GPL bypass these days, which
> basically lets ASPs, web services, etc basically use GPL'd software 
> with no source releases (since no binaries are ever 'distributed' as
> such). Since most of the net seems to be moving towards service models
> and away from distribution models, this is merely a licence trying
> to catch up.

So why hinder a typesetter who returns his work as PDF more than a
typesetter who returns printed pages?  Why favor an HTML file
distributed on a floppy over one distributed via HTTP?  This
insistence that interacting with software over a network of electrons
is somehow different from interacting with software via DHL is
ridiculous.  It's not a license catching up, or closing loopholes
without impacting freedom: it's that license authors saw something
which bothered them, and are prohibiting it in their licenses.
They're allowed to do that, certainly, but that doesn't make it Free.

-Brian

-- 
Brian T. Sniffen                                        bts@alum.mit.edu
                       http://www.evenmere.org/~bts/



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