As I have said before, BSD was the unique Unix-like operative system
with a ISC-style license. That's why, IMHO, companies invested in it.

On 3/24/06, Damien Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Fri, 24 Mar 2006, Andris Delfino wrote:
>
> > Please, stop wanting companies to support you. It doesn't work that
> > way. To develop an OS under a licence like the ISC has a big hole:
> > funding. You can't just go: Hey, you use the implementation that I
> > develop and give away for free, you should pay me!. If the pay you,
> > OK, if the don't, well, that's OK too, and more realistic.
>
> Even if we were to accept your pessimistic worldview that organisational
> gratitude is only a myth, then it is still in companies who use
> OpenBSD or OpenSSH interest to contribute - funding committed and
> internally-motivated developers to improve components of your product
> is far less expensive than recruiting, training, paying and providing
> office space for semi-motivated staff who crank out code of varying
> quality for financial reward alone.
>
> BTW, your linkage between the license and a lack of funding is
> specious, and there exist plenty of counter examples - including BSD
> itself.
>
> -d

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