GPL survives antitrust challenge - again
Posted Nov 15, 2006 1:43 UTC (Wed) by
bojan (subscriber, #14302)
In reply to:
GPL survives antitrust challenge - again by jstAusr
Parent article:
GPL survives antitrust challenge - again
Precisely.
However, Wallace claims the opposite should be true:
> Daniel Wallace would like to compete with Linuxeither by offering a derivative work or by writing an operating system from scratchbut maintains that this is impossible as long as Linux and its derivatives are available for free. He contends that IBM, Red Hat, and Novell have conspired among themselves and with others (including the Free Software Foundation) to eliminate competition in the operating system market by making Linux available at an unbeatable price.
He's saying that because GPL (through copyright) allows requirement of "no charge", he's injured, because his would-be competitors, IBM, Red Hat and Novell have conspired to undersell him. He would like that copyright demands royalties, which would then bring GPL out of antitrust trouble. But judge knows better, of course.
Can you explain the other mechanisms that GPL would use to set the "charge" to zero? I was under the impression that the power of GPL is the power of copyright...
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