|
|
Log in / Subscribe / Register

Kuhn: A Comprehensive Analysis of the GPL Issues With the Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) Business Model

Kuhn: A Comprehensive Analysis of the GPL Issues With the Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) Business Model

Posted Jun 25, 2023 19:51 UTC (Sun) by Karellen (subscriber, #67644)
In reply to: Kuhn: A Comprehensive Analysis of the GPL Issues With the Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) Business Model by Wol
Parent article: Kuhn: A Comprehensive Analysis of the GPL Issues With the Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) Business Model

all I'm seeing here is a bunch of alleged FLOSS guys being freeloaders and worse.

If Red Hat offers no value to you, then why do you want it?

Interesting take. I see it differently. I see a bunch of FOSS devs protecting the value they created.

It's not "Red Hat offers no value to me", it's "Red Hat is offering value I created to 3rd parties, but under terms that aren't compatible with the terms I intended those 3rd parties to receive".

It's not "I have two choices, to accept Red Hat's offer, or to decline it", it's "Red Hat is not giving 3rd parties the choice to have the software under the terms I offered it, despite the fact I require that it be re-offered under those terms".

I see people moaning and saying "Red Hat are awful immoral people - they're giving away my stuff without also giving the recipients the freedoms I intended them to have when they received the stuff I made".

Rather, it's Red Hat who have the choice here. Include and redistrubute my stuff under the license I released it with - including in the spirit of the license which should be clearly spelled out in the Preamble - or do not include it in their distribution.


to post comments

Kuhn: A Comprehensive Analysis of the GPL Issues With the Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) Business Model

Posted Jun 25, 2023 20:36 UTC (Sun) by pizza (subscriber, #46) [Link] (4 responses)

> It's not "Red Hat offers no value to me", it's "Red Hat is offering value I created to 3rd parties, but under terms that aren't compatible with the terms I intended those 3rd parties to receive".

Red Hat is offering value that *they* created to third parties, under their own terms.

Those third parties can get the value *you* created from many, many places, including (presumably) directly from you.

Kuhn: A Comprehensive Analysis of the GPL Issues With the Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) Business Model

Posted Jun 26, 2023 10:09 UTC (Mon) by Karellen (subscriber, #67644) [Link] (3 responses)

Um, I don't think that anyone is claiming that RedHat should not be able to distribute any code they wrote themselves under any terms they like?

Kuhn: A Comprehensive Analysis of the GPL Issues With the Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) Business Model

Posted Jun 26, 2023 10:53 UTC (Mon) by farnz (subscriber, #17727) [Link] (2 responses)

The spec files in the SRPMs for RHEL are source code, and are all written by Red Hat. If you're requiring RH to ship the specfiles for the binaries they ship to a third party (not their customers), then you're requiring them to ship code they wrote themselves under terms they don't like.

Kuhn: A Comprehensive Analysis of the GPL Issues With the Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) Business Model

Posted Jun 26, 2023 14:13 UTC (Mon) by paulj (subscriber, #341) [Link] (1 responses)

The GPL code they ship requires "the scripts used to control compilation and installation of the executable" (GPLv2) to be distributed as part of the source code of the work under the GPL.

Kuhn: A Comprehensive Analysis of the GPL Issues With the Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) Business Model

Posted Jun 26, 2023 14:20 UTC (Mon) by farnz (subscriber, #17727) [Link]

Sure, but I was responding to the idea that "[no]one is claiming RedHat should not be able to distribute any code they wrote themselves under any terms they like". They are very definitely restricted in the terms they can use to distribute code they wrote themselves, as part of the GPL's mechanism for building a software commons.


Copyright © 2026, Eklektix, Inc.
Comments and public postings are copyrighted by their creators.
Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds