> From: John Abreau [mailto:abre...@gmail.com]
> 
> Another silly claim. The FSF cannot sue Joe on behalf of the copyright holder.
> The FSF can only sue if the copyright was assigned to the FSF.
> 
> The FSF would not be entitled to sue Joe Schmoe unless Joe Schmoe violated
> the license on something for which the FSF held the copyright.

busybox is not copyrighted to the FSF.  Its individual files are copyrighted to 
a zillion different individuals.

But it looks like I did make one mistake:  It wasn't the FSF, it was the SFLC, 
Software Freedom Law Center, who filed lawsuit on behalf of two guys, who 
contributed to busybox development.  But the people who originated busybox were 
not represented, nor benefitted from the settlements.

So it seems, if you want to sue somebody on behalf of somebody else's open 
source software, you just need contribute to it (or fork it and then contribute 
to it), and find some way that a recipient was in violation of the license 
terms.

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