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Re: Defining 'preferred form for making modifications'



Anthony DeRobertis <asd@suespammers.org> writes:

> On Tuesday, Jun 24, 2003, at 13:29 US/Eastern, Thomas Bushnell, BSG
> wrote:
> 
> > Anthony DeRobertis <asd@suespammers.org> writes:
> >
> >> I don't think an interpretation of the GPL that says "I wrote this
> >> code in C. Forever is C must it stay!" is correct.
> >
> > Right.  All I'm saying is you must distribute the C code; I don't care
> > whether you continue to make changes in that language.
> 
> Why would C stay the preferred form for modifying a work for eternity,
> even when the current work bares hardly a resemblence to its C
> original?

It is *PART* of the source.  Not the whole source, but part of it.

> So, essentially, you're saying that for either images or translations
> to other programming languages, the GPL is a original source + patches
> license? Does this apply to human-language translations as well? What
> about changes to C code in C?

No, that's not what I'm saying.  What I'm saying is that editing a
binary cannot remove your obligation to distribute the C source which
produced that binary, even if you do a bunch of significant extensive
edits, even if you threw away the C source.



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