GPL survives antitrust challenge - again
Posted Nov 15, 2006 19:32 UTC (Wed) by
bojan (subscriber, #14302)
In reply to:
GPL survives antitrust challenge - again by jstAusr
Parent article:
GPL survives antitrust challenge - again
This thing with "distribution" (I guess this would be by the copyright holder) and "redistribution" (I guess this would be by all others) is really silly. Linus cannot ask for royalties in Linux any more than I can. Your charity example, where people give him money voluntarily, doesn't count, I'm afraid. I think you don't really understand what a copyright royalty is.
As for "allowing requirement of no charge" - this is Wallace's complaint. He is against a licence that requires people not to charge in perpetuity (which is the GPL). He would like that copyright mandates either a royalty charge or that the distribution rules allow him to introduce one. Unfortunately for him, judge gets what GPL does and is fine with it.
And I'm not assuming anything - I've shown through quotes from the ruling that the judge refers to matters of copyright and that the charge in question is a royalty charge.
But, you chose to believe otherwise - well that's OK with me. I can only do so much convincing...
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