Aiming at the GPL?
Posted Aug 21, 2003 5:23 UTC (Thu) by
ksmathers (guest, #2353)
Parent article:
Aiming at the GPL?
SCO's argument is the GPL's rights waiver is meaningless if the copyright holder doesn't actually agree to waive those rights. Since the rights are reserved under copyright law, copyright trumps GPL. IBM will have to argue that SCO received consideration for the waiver of those rights, or else the license may indeed be considered too one sided to represent a valid contract.
That is not true of other proprietary licenses, although it may be true of other open source licenses. The type of consideration that GPL relies on has never been tested in court to my knowlege, so it isn't clear where the court will side. Licenses like the BSD license are even more ephemeral than the GPL, waiving exclusive rights in exchange only for an agreement not to seek reimbursement on warrantee.
Proprietary licenses which only further restrict use beyond those already reserved under copyright clearly involve direct consideration in the form of cash in exchange for the licensed uses. Here a court is much more likely to judge that there has been a meeting of minds in the exchange of license for cash, so proprietary licenses are not at all likely to be affected by a hypothetical ruling in favor of SCO.
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