Kernel developers' position on GPLv3
Kernel developers' position on GPLv3
Posted Sep 23, 2006 1:57 UTC (Sat) by sepreece (guest, #19270)In reply to: Kernel developers' position on GPLv3 by Richard_J_Neill
Parent article: Kernel developers' position on GPLv3
My point is that disallowing use of free software in such devices will have essentially zero effect on whether the devices exist. The devices WILL exist, because consumers WANT them. If you want to fight DRM, the place to do it is in Congress (if you're in the US) and through public awareness.
"Protected content" exists because the content owners have said "these are the terms under which you can have our content" and most people are, apparently, willing to accept those terms. If you want to fight it, work to make people see that it's an unfair exchange. I think you'll have a hard sell, because the huge majority of them just want their TV programs, movies, and songs and don't really care about using them other than as the DRM allows, but maybe you can make some headway. Telling manufacturers "you can't use our software in this kind of device" just means they'll have to use different software, of which there is no particular shortage.
The current GPLv3 language tries to take an issue that belongs in legal and market arenas and make it a license term. This hurts the community (which benefits from the work and investment of the device manufacturers) and gains nothing in return.
