GPL survives antitrust challenge - again
Posted Nov 13, 2006 16:08 UTC (Mon) by
jstAusr (guest, #27224)
In reply to:
GPL survives antitrust challenge - again by bojan
Parent article:
GPL survives antitrust challenge - again
Your analysis as to the reason why the court order is worded the way it is may well be correct. However, the case is how the GNU GPL stands in relation to antitrust law, NOT about how GNU GPL stands in relation to proprietary software distribution and antitrust law. So, the court order should be addressing antitrust law and the GNU GPL. If the Judges want to include other analysis it should be clearly noted, otherwise it may be a cause for confusion in the future. If the case was: GNU GPL violates antitrust law because it doesn't require the payment of royalties as some software distribution models do, that case could be easily dismissed because antitrust law doesn't require the payment of royalties.
GNU GPL relies on copyright law as its backup, if someone distributing GNU GPL'd software doesn't accept the terms of GNU GPL then copyright law will prevent them from legally distributing the software at all. The third snippet that you quote in your comment, doesn't seem to recognize that relationship between copyright and GNU GPL. The insertion of the word "even" is probably the most troubling part of the order to me although, stating that GNU GPL requires "no charge" is also wrong, unless antitrust law were to define "no charge" as no royalties.
In my limited experience, courts are usually rather insistent about keeping their rulings on target regarding the law that is being addressed. If you want royalties to be relevant, please show the intersection between the GNU GPL, royalties and antitrust law, without relying on a rather unrelated (to the law being ruled on) software distribution model.
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