Just one point in support of Rick's assertion here. My points as I stated I think clearly, are under the assumption that a court would look at the GPL v2 and try to map it directly to compiled/collected works (license allows without regard to license of other components) and derivative works (requires to be under the same license). Beyond the uncertainties I have suggested there's a second way I could see a court looking at it (again IANAL but I have listened to a lot of oral argument and read a lot of case law).
I could see a court saying "the near-unanimous view of the GPL v2 as expressed by the licensor here is that a work that links to this work is based on it for purposes of this license. Therefore it doesn't matter whether or not it meets the definition of derivative work or not. The licensee knew this was the intention of the license and therefore we intend to enforce it as such." So I think you have questions as to how the GPL v2 would/should be interpreted and, depending on that, questions of where the line is between a compiled and a derivative work. I don't think either of these are as clear as the "you need a license if you link" crowd would like to think though. Best Wishes, Chris Travers _______________________________________________ License-discuss mailing list License-discuss@opensource.org http://projects.opensource.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/license-discuss