Hi, thank you for the replies, Liam and Jernej. I just wanted one last thing clarified: I see Jernej mentions that the entire GIMP program is under the GPL because any other licensed work that may have been used would be compatible with the GPL. And, also, it is mentioned that the free licenses, according to the licensors, only cover distribution and not usage. I understand this due to GPL section 9, but how is that the case for MIT?
>User doesn't have to agree to any of GIMP's licenses in order to use >it - GPL–compatible licenses only govern redistribution, not usage >(they're not EULAs). But I find that there is confusion among people since licenses like MIT (which is GPL compatible) explicitly mention the word "use" when listing the rights that the license give, according to the licensor. Can you please explain how to properly understand it (in that, it doesn't intend to govern use and only intends to govern distribution)? Sorry for the long question, but basically: I understand the GPL only covers distribution, and not usage, BUT how do I understand that the MIT only governs distribution? Why do so many people have different interpretations because some say it (the MIT) is an agreement that does cover usage, which interpretation is correct? ________________________________ From: Liam R E Quin <l...@holoweb.net> Sent: June 18, 2020 7:21 PM To: Muhammad Ali <m.ali...@hotmail.com>; gimp-user-list@gnome.org <gimp-user-list@gnome.org> Subject: Re: [Gimp-user] License Question On Thu, 2020-06-18 at 18:25 +0000, Muhammad Ali via gimp-user-list wrote: > Hi, with regards to licenses: > Firstly, is versions of the GPL the only licenses that covers GIMP > code? Or are there some parts of GIMP source code covered by a > different license like, for example, Apache 2.0. This was already answered i think. > Secondly, if there are some parts of the source code covered by a > different license, does an end-user, according to you, agree to those > extra licenses as well? or, according to you, does the end user only > receive the entire source code (including the different license > parts) licensed under the terms of the GPLv3? There are two separate issues here. First, as pointed out in another response, the GPL applies to people distributing GIMP (although that includes the GIMP authors)... Second, you get all the source, although you only need the source, in general, if you want to modify GIMP, or to compile it yourself, e.g. ona computer systemfor which there are no binary packages available. Liam (slave ankh) -- Liam Quin - web slave for https://www.fromoldbooks.org/ Voluntary servitude is a choice i have made; unlike actual slavery, i am free to unmake the choice at any time. _______________________________________________ gimp-user-list mailing list List address: gimp-user-list@gnome.org List membership: https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gimp-user-list List archives: https://mail.gnome.org/archives/gimp-user-list