Not making a source code offer
Not making a source code offer
Posted Jan 28, 2026 12:10 UTC (Wed) by farnz (subscriber, #17727)In reply to: Is the contract restricted to the buyers, or to the "any 3rd party" of the GPL? by developer122
Parent article: SFC v. VIZIO: who can enforce the GPL?
The risk of not making a source code offer, when it's common practice and clearly required by the license, is that you'll find yourself deemed to be a "wilful infringer", with associated higher penalties and lower burden of proof on the copyright holder (since the copyright holder now just has to prove infringement, not damages).
It would be quite hard for a company to argue that it did not know that the GPL required source code or an offer thereof nowadays, or to argue that it did not know that Linux was under the GPL, and not free to redistribute as a binary without source. But it's easy for a company to argue that it wasn't wilful infringement if it tried to comply, but turned out unable to do so when called on it.
