Re: LICENSES [was: Re: Have you seen this?]
> > However, the license for that derived work (I'll call it A) claims
> > that the whole of A must be GPL'd. However, Qt is not part of A (the
> > GPL says "section of"). Qt provides services to A, and A depends on
> > those services: A very different thing.
>
> Qt is part of the derived work. It is linked to it and the work A does not
> function without it. It is also not a public API and your message to Preston
> concerning possible legal action against harmony makes it clear you regard
> the item as actively protected IPR not an open API
I understood the meaning of "is derived from" to be "using the source code
to make a derivative of" as opposed to "using the services of".
If I use libc, I don't think I am creating a libc. Unless I am, I'm not
deriving, I think. If I use libc, I simply use the services. Hence, libc
is "a section of" the thing I am making, and does not derive from it.
How is this wrong? Is it "strategic" to look at sections as derivations?
-Jim
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