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GPL versions not such a big dealGPL versions not such a big dealPosted Mar 27, 2008 1:47 UTC (Thu) by dlang (subscriber, #313)In reply to: GPL versions not such a big deal by BrucePerens Parent article: Bruce Perens and the OSI board
it just means that someone can take your code and combine it with GPLv3 code and remove the permission that you granted. if you just use GPLv2 (without or later) your code cannot be (ab)used this way. believe it or not Bruce, many people aren't happy with others taking their code and putting more restrictive licenses on the resulting work and will pick a license that doesn't allow that
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GPL versions not such a big deal Posted Mar 27, 2008 2:01 UTC (Thu) by BrucePerens (subscriber, #2510) [Link] believe it or not Bruce, many people aren't happy with others taking their code and putting more restrictive licenses on the resulting workI understand. It's my honest opinion that whatever is chosen, somebody would be unhappy with the choice. In this case I think that more people are going to be willing to put up with the tivo stuff in order to have a license that went through that high a degree of legal review. Thanks Bruce
GPL versions not such a big deal Posted Mar 27, 2008 12:52 UTC (Thu) by hummassa (subscriber, #307) [Link] > it just means that someone can take your code and combine it with GPLv3 code and > remove the permission that you granted. In the combined work, yes, but in your code, no. You granted the permission to tivoize your code, your permission is there, latent. If I take _your_ code and put in my TiVoSX, but not the code that the other author does not want tivoized, it's ok. That is the beauty of the GPLv3+waivers: Your code: GPLv3 + waiver tivoizing My code: GPLv3 Combined code: GPLv3 If anyone wants to tivoize your code, _nothing_ will stop them. Your wishes regarding _your_ code are _always_ respected. Now, your wishes regarding _my_ code...
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