Perpetual vs. irrevocable
Posted Oct 30, 2003 1:40 UTC (Thu) by
StevenCole (guest, #3068)
In reply to:
Perpetual vs. irrevocable by bryn
Parent article:
SCO responds to IBM's counterclaims
That's true, and perpetual licenses sold by Oracle have a clearly
labeled "Off" switch. If you violate certain terms, then your
perpetual license ends, and that's fair because the "Off" switch
is right there in the contract.
But the agreement referenced above has no
such "Off" switch, and I suspect (but have not seen) that the Unix
License which IBM originally made was similar. No "Off" switch on
a perpetual anything should equate to a reasonable expectation that
the anything will not stop.
So IBM may be entitled to additional
compensation due to the doctrine of Promissory Estoppel from
SCO saying they have revoked a (no off-switch)
perpetual license. IBM has already
made claims citing promissory estoppel arising from a reasonable
expectation that SCO would abide by the GPL.
If anyone has a link
to IBM's license, that would be interesting reading.
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