GPL survives antitrust challenge - again
Posted Nov 11, 2006 8:03 UTC (Sat) by
bojan (subscriber, #14302)
In reply to:
GPL survives antitrust challenge - again by jstAusr
Parent article:
GPL survives antitrust challenge - again
Thanks. You had me confused there for a while, so I had to ask :-)
I still think that the judge fully groks the GPL. For instance, he says:
> Red Hat, Inc., sells media (such as DVDs), manuals, and support for the installation and maintenance of Linux. The GPL covers only the software; people are free to charge for the physical media on which it comes and for assistance in making it work.
Quite obviously, he understands that Red Hat is selling a derivative of Linux here on that media. Now, if literal meaning of charging would be taken from here:
> Thus the GPL propagates from user to user and revision to revision: neither the original author, nor any creator of a revised or improved version, may charge for the software or allow any successor to charge.
It would mean that Red Hat would be in trouble with the copyright law, as per the next sentence:
> Copyright law, usually the basis of limiting reproduction in order to collect a fee, ensures that open-source software remains free: any attempt to sell a derivative work will violate the copyright laws, even if the improver has not accepted the GPL.
Again, quite obviously, the judge is quite comfortable with what Red Hat are doing, WRT the GPL. So, he must understand the difference between selling the licence and collection of royalties for each subsequent copy and selling that particular copy.
I think the confusion comes from the everyday language where selling the software means selling the licence for it. For instance, Microsoft is selling the software to Dell, which then further sells it to customers. When each copy is sold by Dell, a copyright royalty is forwarded to Microsoft. This is what the judge is referring to here, IMHO - your usual, proprietary software sale, which is not something GPL permits.
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