[Clipart] [OT] PD and Software

Jonathan Phillips jon at rejon.org
Tue Apr 13 12:36:51 PDT 2004


I agree with that assessment. Can you place that on the wiki if that is
what we agree upon as the concern. Maybe this should go under principles
for the project....a pseudo-constitution.

Jon


On Tue, 2004-04-13 at 12:27, Jonathan Phillips wrote:
> Yeah, more restrictive licenses exist because of closed copyright law.
> The GPL is very much the protective license for intellectual property
> and provides a mechanism in our society which allows the hegemony of
> individuality to prevail over public growth....
> 
> I still vote for PUBLIC DOMAIN.
> 
> Jon
> 
> 
> On Tue, 2004-04-13 at 11:52, Daniel Carrera wrote:
> > cws456456 at aol.com wrote:
> > 
> > > Can Software be released to the Public Domain?
> > 
> > Yes.
> > 
> > > If so, wouldn't that be the most "free" and "open" way to release it?
> > 
> > A lot of people would agree with you, a lot of people would disagree.
> > 
> > This goes back to the old question, "which is the most free society, the one 
> > that gives you the most freedoms, or the ones that has rules designed to 
> > protect your freedom?".
> > 
> > People in the first group generally tend to prefer licenses like BSD, MIT, 
> > and X11.  These licenses essentially ammount to "you can do anything you 
> > want with this".  In practice, they are as good as Public Domain.
> > 
> > People in the latter group prefer more restrictive licenses like the GPL, 
> > LGPL (and perhaps SISSL).  These licenses have more restrictions, as they 
> > are intended to promote and encourage the existence of free software.
> > 
> > > I think that woudl clear up a lot of the GPL, LGPL, BSD, QRS, TUV, WTH,
> >  > CWS, BOB etc etc ad nuseum...  debates.
> > 
> > Almost all those debates essentially come down to the question above.
> > 
> > > Just pure and simple. No one could say that it is "non-free".
> >  > No one could ever call it closed.
> > 
> > True, and no one does.  They *are* free, and they are not closed.
> > 
> > 
> > > Wouldn't that be great?
> > 
> > Microsoft certainly loves it.  They are very fond of grabbing other people's 
> > works, inserting it in Windows and calling it an "innovation".  In some 
> > cases (e.g. Kerberos) they will then proceed to change the protocols in a 
> > propietary secret way.  Then use your own work to compete against you, push 
> > you out of the market, and then use your work as another tool to lock-in 
> > customers (Kerberos).
> > 
> > Notice, Microsoft doesn't have a problem with open source.  They have been 
> > using it for years.  It is the GPL they don't like.  Because the GPL is the 
> > one license that doesn't permit them to take an unfair advantage of other 
> > people's work and then claim they did it.
> > 
> > The first group likes it better that way, the second group does not.  Again, 
> > it comes down to how you answer the question I posed above.
> > 
> > 
> > Cheers,
-- 

Jon Phillips
Graduate Researcher
Visual Arts Department

PO BOX 948667
LA JOLLA, CA 
92037
USA

cell.858.361.2811
jon at rejon.org
http://www.rejon.org





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