I am a little puzzled as to the controversy. I attended a law conference recently where a Microsoft attorney spoke on a panel identified as "open source software." As odd as that was since there were no members of the open source community on the panel, Microsoft's long list of legal risks warning others away from developing open source software did not include the FUD that the software cannot be sold. In fact on that point I thought Microsoft accurately acknowledged that open source software can be sold successfully through a dual licensing model. Is there really any genuine doubt that this is occurring?
- Rod : Marius Amado Alves <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: : : > For the 100000th time someone is trying to say that you can sell open : > source software. Some people including myself sustain that you can't, : > in practice. (That is, you can charge, and even sell a couple of : > copies, but you'll be out of business the next day, when someone : > starts giving copies for peanuts.) I asked the questions I did for two : > possibilities: : : That is a convincing reason why there is a cap on profits you can make : by selling open source software. If your profits get too high, : somebody will undercut you on price. However, it is not a reason for : why you can not sell open source software at all. : : : Again, this is beside the point of whether you can reasonably describe : non-open-source software as "commercial open source." I maintain that : you can not. : : Ian : -- : license-discuss archive is at http://crynwr.com/cgi-bin/ezmlm-cgi?3 : -- license-discuss archive is at http://crynwr.com/cgi-bin/ezmlm-cgi?3