GNU's healthy now, and will soon be moreso
Posted Sep 28, 2013 1:26 UTC (Sat) by
khim (subscriber, #9252)
In reply to:
GNU's healthy now, and will soon be moreso by coriordan
Parent article:
30 years of GNU
It contains a README saying it's a GNU project, and an AUTHORS file saying FSF is the copyright holder.
Really? For GnuTLS 3.2.4? Perhaps you are living in some other universe then me. Transdimensional communication is probably bigger discovery then mere squabbles between “free software” and “open source” proponents! We should investigate this phenomenon further…
Got any other evidence that proves I'm right?
Not really. It's kinda pointless to offer evidence to someone who refuses to admit that black is black and white is white.
First, that makes no sense because if they only care about users, to the point that they give up on software freedom, then why use a free software licence in the first place?
Not free software license. Open source license. ESR explained why quite well in his well known book. It has nothing to do with “free software” jihad, it's just a better software development model. Well, it's better in certain circumstances and worse in some other cases, but I digress.
I don't have links or stats about GPLv3, but John Sullivan of FSF makes a solid case for there being a big increase in the use of GNU licences:
http://faif.us/cast-media/FaiF_0x23_Is-Copyleft-Framed_slides.pdf
One phrase from said “solid case” says it all: When it comes to looking
at a different, well-vetted frame of software — like what's in Debian
GNU/Linux — GPL family use is very high. If you ignore the fact that most software novadays are developed not for inclusion in traditional Linux distributions but for the Web, Android and iOS then yes, you can conclude that GPL use is growing. But it's not because copyleft is winning. That's because developers are moving in other directions and develop things for other platforms. Also note that even in said “well-vetted frame of software” GPLv3 only managed to grab 10-20% of all GPL packages. And we know that if you value freedom you should use GPLv3, not GPLv2, right?
(
Log in to post comments)