GNU's healthy now, and will soon be moreso
Posted Sep 27, 2013 20:41 UTC (Fri) by
khim (subscriber, #9252)
In reply to:
GNU's healthy now, and will soon be moreso by coriordan
Parent article:
30 years of GNU
I also checked to see to see what happened afterwards.
Hmm… really? Have you checked the GNU ftp site?
The article was about Nikos taking GnuTLS out of GNU, but all the GNU releases since the article have all been made by... Nikos.
You mean non-GNU releases on non-GNU sites?
Last GNU versions are 3.0.26/3.1.5. All versions after that (3.0.32/3.1.14/3.2.4 currently) are released not as part of GNU project and they are not released via usual GNU channels. Sure, they were made by Nikos. And FSF was even provided redirects from old addresses @ http://www.gnu.org/software/gnutls/ to new addresses @ http://www.gnutls.org/. That's cool: this means that they kept enough common sense to understand that even if legally they can try to keep GnuTLS as GNU “zombie project” it'll just make them a laughing stock.
But the fact remains: GnuTLS have left the GNU project and it's not coming back.
GPLv3 means your software will be rejected by corporations that never wanted users to get the freedoms anyway.
Sure. Few corporations do.
If your goal is to do unpaid work for corporations, then GPLv3 is not for you. If your goal is for users to be free to use, modify, run and redistribute, then GPLv3+ is your best bet.
Well, that's one way of saying it. Another way is to say that if you do care about users then GPLv3 is not for you. If you do care only about software freedom (and it does not matter for you if users will ever see or care about your software) then yes, GPLv3 is your best bet.
As I've said before: GPLv3 separated people who think about software as means of doing something and people who think about software (and software's freedom) as goal. And most people care more about people then they care about unfeeling bytes.
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