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| subject: | Re: The Free Software Definition - Free Software Foundation |
On Oct 24, 11:35=A0am, "Bill Buckels" wrote: > Back again to Stallman's totalitarianism, and I'll clean that up by > withdrawing the comment altogether, but my point is really that software > authors should be remunerated as in every profession. There are two major flaws in this statement: one being that remuneration can only be measured in dollars, the other being the completely inappropriate use of the term 'totalitarianism'. The GNU GPL is no more, and in fact much less restrictive than a proprietary software license. Of course, it's designed with the concept of restricting licensees to the terms of the license in precisely the same way as a proprietary license, which is why it's often ironically referred to as 'copyleft'. It's also ironic that the 'other side' has expended considerable effort to use the legal system to kill the GPL - something they see as cancerous. Ok, that's a little closer to the totalitarian definition, no? If one appreciates the difference between copyright and license, one can see how the GPL can in fact be very useful. A classic example is the company TrollTech, who develop the UI library Qt. This library is available under the GPL and used as the foundation of the Open Source desktop environment Qt. However, since the GPL forbids linking against proprietary software, those wishing to use Qt in a commercial product must pay TrollTech for a license. In this way, using the GPL serves the needs and philosophies of both camps. And you call this Totalitarian? :-) Of course, actual totalitarianism has and does exist in this world. Consider for example the 1600 burning at the stake of philosopher Giordano Bruno, or the the 1633 trial of Galileo Galilei at the tyrannical, theocratic ministrations of the Roman Catholic Church, then you might have an idea of what totalitarian actually means. Matt --- SBBSecho 2.12-Win32* Origin: Derby City Gateway (1:2320/0) SEEN-BY: 10/1 3 34/999 120/228 123/500 140/1 222/2 226/0 236/150 249/303 SEEN-BY: 250/306 261/20 38 100 1404 1406 1410 1418 266/1413 280/1027 320/119 SEEN-BY: 393/11 396/45 633/260 267 712/848 800/432 801/161 189 2222/700 SEEN-BY: 2320/100 105 200 2905/0 @PATH: 2320/0 100 261/38 633/260 267 |
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