Ciaran O'Riordan wrote: > > "Koh Choon Lin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > I think the title is misleading: "Paying for good software" will lead > > others to think that free means free of charge. > > That blog does mean free of charge. It's a freeware blog, not a free > software blog.
C'mon, Guh-NÜ activist ciaran, http://www.voluntarytrade.org/newsite/modules/news/article.php?storyid=125 <quote> Easterbrook, Circuit Judge. Does the provision of copyrighted software under the GNU General Public License (GPL) violate the federal antitrust laws? Authors who distribute their works under this license, devised by the Free Software Foundation, Inc., authorize not only copying but also the creation of derivative worksand the license prohibits charging for the derivative work. People may make and distribute derivative works if and only if they come under the same license terms as the original work. Thus the GPL propagates from user to user and revision to revision: neither the original author, nor any creator of a revised or improved version, may charge for the software or allow any successor to charge. Copyright law, usually the basis of limiting reproduction in order to collect a fee, ensures that open-source software remains free: any attempt to sell a derivative work will violate the copyright laws, even if the improver has not accepted the GPL. The Free Software Foundation calls the result copyleft. </quote> regards, alexander. -- "You see Free Software has been so successful because we have shown we can develop software without any money. Volunteers do it. We don't need to have money to develop powerful large programs. But we certainly need to have money if we're going to buy patent licences." -- Lunatic Richard Stallman _______________________________________________ gnu-misc-discuss mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnu-misc-discuss
