GPLv3 is designed to ensure the software user's freedom
Posted Oct 25, 2006 1:48 UTC (Wed) by
bojan (subscriber, #14302)
In reply to:
GPLv3 is designed to ensure the software user's freedom by bignose
Parent article:
Linux: GPLv3, DRM, and Exceptions (KernelTrap.org)
> The license can't force anyone to do anything; it grants them more options than they would have in the absence of the license. Whether they choose to exercise those options is their choice.
Aha, my point exactly. If Linux went GPLv3 today, Tivo wouldn't ship it any more, as it would violate their contracts with content providers. They would exercise that choice faster than you could say "no DRM".
So, your original "Not at all" to bronson's point that GPLv3 rules out running such software on TC (i.e. DRM enabled) hardware is obviously not true. A theoretical possibility of someone doing something silly (like shipping supposedly secret keys to everyone) doesn't make it any closer to being reality. People just won't do it, as long as practical and legal surrounding allow them to do something that can earn them more money.
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