Tyler MacDonald wrote:

Greetings FreeRadius people,

        This discussion started on the postgresql's "pgsql-general" mailing
list. The problem here is that the freeradius-postgresql package needs to
link against libpgsql, which means that it may be indirectly linked against
openssl. There is a conflict between OpenSSL's BSD license and the GPL which
means that it's not legal to distribute a copy of GPL code that is linked in
this way. It appears that several other GPL apps have added a special clause
to their license that allows them to be linked against OpenSSL.
IANAL, but I don't think that this argument flies. I don't think that indirect linking constitutes derivation. Indeed I don't think that linking constitutes derivation absent other factors. At least in the 9th Circuit, you have the Gates test (Gates Rubber, not Bill Gates), which might well suggest that linking is *not* derivation at least in this jurisdiction.

Generally for one work to be a derivative of another, you have to have some degree of derivation which is evident. This need not be literal copying. But hte line migh be quite fuzzy-- for example, a program which makes extensive use of a non-standard Windows API might be argued to be a derivative work of Windows (MySQL used to make a similar argument regarding dependance on their client libraries, so this is not that far fetched).

The direction Debian is taking this seems rediculous in the extreme-- that one might need a license to develop software for Windows, just like you would if you wanted to use MySQL only via ODBC....

Best WIshes,
Chris Travers
Metatron Technology Consulting
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