GPL survives antitrust challenge - again
Posted Nov 14, 2006 1:04 UTC (Tue) by
bojan (subscriber, #14302)
In reply to:
GPL survives antitrust challenge - again by jstAusr
Parent article:
GPL survives antitrust challenge - again
> 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,
Even refers to an activity performed "without a licence". This is bare copyright. It doesn't get any clearer than that.
> stating that GNU GPL requires "no charge" is also wrong, unless antitrust law were to define "no charge" as no royalties.
See below what the judge has to say about that. He's not afraid to use copyright law to define what the charges may be. And why would he be? The copyright is the law that provides the power for price fixing here. GPL is a copyright licence.
> 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.
Well, this is from the ruling:
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.
That's the judge talking, not me. He obviously has no qualms about mentioning copyright law in the ruling about antitrust law. And that's because copyright law is the lever that would be used for price fixing - which is the link between copyright law and antitrust law here. It is only through copyright law (because GPL is a copyright licence) that one can fix prices of "software" (i.e. the licence). The price you pay for the software (i.e. the licence) is called "copyright royalty".
Without copyright power here, there is no possibility of Red Hat, IBM and others in conspiring to price fix, bar some kind of secret "contract" between them, which is never mentioned anywhere and certainly not in the ruling.
And the court is saying that although that is the case with GPL licensed software (zero royalty charge), there is no antitrust problem, because this kind of behaviour does not lead to low prices, followed by the exit of producers who can no longer make a profit, followed by monopoly prices.
It would be naive and wrong for the judge to rule on the validity of the GPL in relation to antitrust law without taking into account the effects of the copyright law. After all, GPL without copyright law a meaningless and powerless chunk of text. So, your assumption that it is somehow possible to find intersection between the GNU GPL, royalties and antitrust law, without relying on [copyright] doesn't make any sense to me. That's kind of the point that I'm trying to make - judge groks what GPL does (in the context of copyright) and when this is applied to antitrust, he's OK with it.
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