Marius Amado Alves <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > "My employer sells commercial open source software. > It fully complies with the OSD--in fact, it is under the BSD license." > > Do you really sell the software (not support, not buy-out)?
Yes, we sell the software. It comes with installation support, but additional support is extra. > How have you been keeping people from giving copies of it away gratis > (hence invalidating your business)? Why should people give away copies of it? What would they gain by doing that? In fact, they would lose: they would spend money to get software, and then they would give it to their competitors for free. Certainly some altruistic individual might pay for the software and then give it away. In practice, nobody bothers. It's just not worth worrying about that kind of thing, at least not in the space that we are in (embedded operating systems and development tools). If you want to run a business, you have to worry about the problems that you really do encounter, not the problems that might theoretically arise. This is all beside the point I wanted to make. Even if we only sold support, that would still be a case of commercial open source software. "Proprietary open source" is a contradiction, and perhaps there are cases in which you would start calling some non-open-source software "proprietary open source." But "commercial open source" is meaningful, and there are several companies engaged in it. Calling non-open-source software "commercial open source" is deceptive. Ian -- license-discuss archive is at http://crynwr.com/cgi-bin/ezmlm-cgi?3