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A few thoughts on Jonathan's opinions

A few thoughts on Jonathan's opinions

Posted Dec 7, 2010 21:38 UTC (Tue) by bkuhn (subscriber, #58642)
Parent article: Getting grubby with ZFS

A few notes on what you've said, Jonathan:

  • I think you create a false dichotomy when you say: Either the FSF no longer believes this, or it has decided that license enforcement will never be necessary for GRUB.. All of us who enforce the GPL know that it's easier to enforce GPL if you have most or all of the copyrights, but still very much possible even with only a plurality of copyright on the code (cf. BusyBox enforcement). I'd venture to say it's somewhat of a linear sliding scale: the more copyrights you hold, the easier your enforcement efforts are. The FSF clearly made a small trade-off in that regard to get something useful for GRUB development. That seems like a very reasonable and good decision to me.
  • I think you're subtly indicating in the way you're arguing your case that the GPLv2 is toothless with regard to patents. I don't think that's the case. There's no question that GPLv3 is better, but that doesn't mean that the GPLv2 implicit patent license isn't still there.
  • There is much current debate among lawyers about whether GPLv2-or-later is equivalent to licensing explicitly under GPLv3. I don't know the answer nor do I want to opine one way or the other, but I think it's safe to assume that reasonable people could believe both conclusions.

Disclaimer: I'm on the Board of Directors of the FSF, but these opinions are my own, not necessarily FSF's opinions.

— bkuhn


to post comments

Off Topic

Posted Dec 8, 2010 16:53 UTC (Wed) by jeremiah (subscriber, #1221) [Link] (3 responses)

I haven't had much luck finding IP lawyers with an understanding of free software. Do you know of a list/site or someplace that would be a good place to start to find knowledgeable FOSS attys.

Off Topic

Posted Dec 8, 2010 18:07 UTC (Wed) by jordanm (guest, #68950) [Link] (1 responses)

There is a law office in New York that specializes in it.

http://www.softwarefreedom.org/

Off Topic

Posted Dec 9, 2010 14:27 UTC (Thu) by jeremiah (subscriber, #1221) [Link]

Thank you so much.

Off Topic

Posted Dec 10, 2010 16:42 UTC (Fri) by wookey (guest, #5501) [Link]

The FTF-legal taskforce is pretty good.http://www.fsfe.org/projects/ftf/ftf.en.html There are a lot of lawyers there including many (most?) of the ones that know about Free Software.

I think 'finding a suitable lawyer for your jurisdiction/problem' is one of the services they provide.


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