RE: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay?
except that licence, is only used in Middle English -Original Message- From: Martin Cooper [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Friday, March 08, 2002 1:20 AM To: Jakarta General List Subject: Re: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay? Are you referring to the noun or the verb? http://dictionary.cambridge.org/define.asp?key=licence*1+0 In short, licence is the noun, license is the verb. Geez, these Americans think they speak English... ;-) ;-) -- Martin Cooper - Original Message - From: Ted Husted [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: Jakarta General List [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, March 07, 2002 4:22 AM Subject: Re: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay? http://www.dictionary.com/search?q=license http://www.dictionary.com/search?q=licence alex wrote: At 09:16 07/03/02, Danny Angus wrote: It is spelled licence. ;-) Wow - we managed to correct Jon on a technical point! (Just kidding Jon - no offence) licenSe is what Apache Software Foundation does - ie the act of licensing. licenCe is the document or permit given - eg the file itself. Since this is all about the document then licenCe is the correct spelling (ignoring Case that is). Personally I feel the existing web page which Jon reminded us of was quite good and if there is anything important missing then that is the page which should be improved. Alex -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay?
Ceki are you sure? I think we definitely need a solid document countering the idyllic but false world depicted by the FSF. I agree with comments you have made already, about the importance of licence and legal to ASF, Jakarta, and individuals involved, but I'm still not convinced that this(jakarta website) is the place to examine wider licence compatibilities. By all means have this discussion, but I think the page should be on www.apache.org and approved by people from all projects. Why? because it expresses an opinion, and expresses it as the opinion of Apache as a whole, and not only of the authors of the paper, therfore it has to actually represent the concensus of opinion. No? d. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay?
From: Andrew C. Oliver [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] The question is: How do you want to spend your time? Possible answers: 1 Fighting an unwinnable (defined as the argument having a logical conclusion where one side overwhelmingly wins) religious war with the GNU hordes (hirds? hurds? ;-) ). . . 2 Coding and documenting There are quite a few people around here who spent an awful lot of time working on #2 because they weren't successful at #1. If the WebMacro folks hadn't stuck to the GPL, it would not have been necessary to reinvent it as Velocity. IMHO, evangelizing the APL is an important goal of the Apache project precisely because it reduces the amount of (re)coding and (re)documenting we will ultimately have to do. I applaud Jeff's document, and I would love to see the finished version linked off the main Jakarta page (as well as www.apache.org). Jeff Schnitzer [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay?
Hi Ceki, -Mensaje original- De: Ceki Gülcü [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Enviado el: miércoles 6 de marzo de 2002 23:39 Para: Jakarta General List [snip] Asunto: Re: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay? The Working Without Copyleft article is remarkably good. The point about the FSF controlling the LGPL is another very significant point: On the contrary, I found this to be the weakest point of the article. The LGPL states that you can choose between the present license or any later version, so any malicious changes to it can be ignored. Below are the relevant sections of the article and the LGPL, so you can make your own judgement (or seek legal advice ;) The Free Software Foundation controls the license. They can release a new version of the license, which then will automatically apply to our software. Although we do not expect the Free Software Foundation of making changes that deviate from the spirit of the current versions, they could make clarifications that are contrary to our intentions. For example, they may clarify that the result of aspect-oriented weaving is subject to the terms of the LGPL, whereas we had intended that it is not. Another concern is who will be in charge of the Free Software Foundation 10 years from now, or what happens if the Free Software Foundation is discontinued? [LGPL, section 13] 13. The Free Software Foundation may publish revised and/or new versions of the Lesser General Public License from time to time. Such new versions will be similar in spirit to the present version, but may differ in detail to address new problems or concerns. Each version is given a distinguishing version number. If the Library specifies a version number of this License which applies to it and any later version, you have the option of following the terms and conditions either of that version or of any later version published by the Free Software Foundation. If the Library does not specify a license version number, you may choose any version ever published by the Free Software Foundation. Un saludo, Alex.
RE: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay?
you have the option of following the terms and conditions either of that version or of any later version published by the Free Software Foundation. If the Library does not specify a license version number, you may choose any version ever published by the Free Software Foundation. Sounds to me like a Get Rich Qwik scheme for lawyers. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay?
At 09:16 07/03/02, Danny Angus wrote: It is spelled licence. ;-) Wow - we managed to correct Jon on a technical point! (Just kidding Jon - no offence) licenSe is what Apache Software Foundation does - ie the act of licensing. licenCe is the document or permit given - eg the file itself. Since this is all about the document then licenCe is the correct spelling (ignoring Case that is). Personally I feel the existing web page which Jon reminded us of was quite good and if there is anything important missing then that is the page which should be improved. Alex -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay?
http://www.dictionary.com/search?q=license http://www.dictionary.com/search?q=licence alex wrote: At 09:16 07/03/02, Danny Angus wrote: It is spelled licence. ;-) Wow - we managed to correct Jon on a technical point! (Just kidding Jon - no offence) licenSe is what Apache Software Foundation does - ie the act of licensing. licenCe is the document or permit given - eg the file itself. Since this is all about the document then licenCe is the correct spelling (ignoring Case that is). Personally I feel the existing web page which Jon reminded us of was quite good and if there is anything important missing then that is the page which should be improved. Alex -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay?
Hi Alex, You are absolutely right. I thought I had this one nailed but apparently not. Thank you for pointing out my mistake. Regards, Ceki Asunto: Re: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay? The Working Without Copyleft article is remarkably good. The point about the FSF controlling the LGPL is another very significant point: On the contrary, I found this to be the weakest point of the article. = The LGPL states that you can choose between the present license or any = later -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay?
Ceki are you sure? I think we definitely need a solid document countering the idyllic but false world depicted by the FSF. I agree with comments you have made already, about the importance of licence and legal to ASF, Jakarta, and individuals involved, but I'm still not convinced that this(jakarta website) is the place to examine wider licence compatibilities. By all means have this discussion, but I think the page should be on www.apache.org and approved by people from all projects. Why? because it expresses an opinion, and expresses it as the opinion of Apache as a whole, and not only of the authors of the paper, therfore it has to actually represent the concensus of opinion. No? Hi Danny, What I am sure about is that licensing clarification efforts should be inerted into the licence FAQ (www.apache.org/foundation/licence-FAQ.html). Thanks for the heads up Jon. Your point about seeking consensus first is interesting. As I understand it, the common mechanism within Apache for doing things is to get something out first, then seek feedback/agreement/consensus/ build some more, seek feedback on the changes, do some more, ... My own personal experience indicates that if you first seek consesus before acting, you are likely to never get anywhere. Regards, Ceki -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay?
Ceki, My own personal experience indicates that if you first seek consesus before acting, you are likely to never get anywhere. Regards, Ceki Point taken, however in this case surely some degree of peer approval needs to be gained before people publicly express views as the views of the project as a whole? Though perhaps this debate is approval enough, and when I think about it perhaps there ought to be a disclaimer instead, along the lines of This document outlines some common arguments and opinions expressed by some of our members, it does not necessarily represent the opinion of the ASF the Jakarta PMC or the membership. In which case you could probably get away with some quite extreme political statements. IMHO. :-) d. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay?
On 3/7/02 8:06 AM, Danny Angus [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Ceki, My own personal experience indicates that if you first seek consesus before acting, you are likely to never get anywhere. Regards, Ceki Point taken, however in this case surely some degree of peer approval needs to be gained before people publicly express views as the views of the project as a whole? Though perhaps this debate is approval enough, and when I think about it perhaps there ought to be a disclaimer instead, along the lines of This document outlines some common arguments and opinions expressed by some of our members, it does not necessarily represent the opinion of the ASF the Jakarta PMC or the membership. In which case you could probably get away with some quite extreme political statements. IMHO. :-) How about just publishing a pointer to the mail archive so it's clear? :) -- Geir Magnusson Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED] System and Software Consulting Age and treachery will always triumph over youth and talent -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay?
Jeff Turner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi, As promised, I've written up an ASL vs. GPL page, for possible inclusion on jakarta-site2. I've more tried to capture the spirit of the thing from the Apache POV, than duplicate the detailed arguments in the O'Reilly article referenced at the end. Please vote on whether you think the reasons outlined here are sufficiently representative. Constructive criticism and change suggestions welcome. If sufficiently approved of, I'll XMLify it and submit a patch. -1, and I already pointed out my vision... Pier -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay?
Marc Saegesser [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I would love to see a document describes the Apache Software License, the philosophy behind it and why we think the ASL is a good thing. What I don't want is another tirade about why GPL sucks. That's a good thing (TM) ,but, as well, I don't think it's the scope of the Jakarta Project, but rather of the Foundation and of the Board to come up with such a thing. And the best place for this discussion is [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Jon, is that right?) Pier -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay?
Are you referring to the noun or the verb? http://dictionary.cambridge.org/define.asp?key=licence*1+0 In short, licence is the noun, license is the verb. Geez, these Americans think they speak English... ;-) ;-) -- Martin Cooper - Original Message - From: Ted Husted [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: Jakarta General List [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, March 07, 2002 4:22 AM Subject: Re: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay? http://www.dictionary.com/search?q=license http://www.dictionary.com/search?q=licence alex wrote: At 09:16 07/03/02, Danny Angus wrote: It is spelled licence. ;-) Wow - we managed to correct Jon on a technical point! (Just kidding Jon - no offence) licenSe is what Apache Software Foundation does - ie the act of licensing. licenCe is the document or permit given - eg the file itself. Since this is all about the document then licenCe is the correct spelling (ignoring Case that is). Personally I feel the existing web page which Jon reminded us of was quite good and if there is anything important missing then that is the page which should be improved. Alex -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: ASL vs. GPL page?
* Andrew C. Oliver [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: | | Order...but that's about the extent of it ;-). Putting the page up | would of course excite RMS people into a frenzy, but who cares (I have | mail filters). If people want the info, let em have it. It doesn't need to be a bashing of the GPL. It would be better to a have an objective comparison that explains the differences in terms of what you can and cannot do with each license. For some organizations the GPL might make for sense than the ASL and vice versa. One license only become better than the other when you look at the actual objectives for the given product. -- Gunnar Rønning - [EMAIL PROTECTED] Senior Consultant, Polygnosis AS, http://www.polygnosis.com/ -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay?
Hi, As promised, I've written up an ASL vs. GPL page, for possible inclusion on jakarta-site2. I've more tried to capture the spirit of the thing from the Apache POV, than duplicate the detailed arguments in the O'Reilly article referenced at the end. Please vote on whether you think the reasons outlined here are sufficiently representative. Constructive criticism and change suggestions welcome. If sufficiently approved of, I'll XMLify it and submit a patch. --Jeff Why prefer the ASL to a copyleft license (eg GPL)? -- This is an slightly distasteful topic for most Apache developers. The license is simply not a central part of the Apache philosophy. Apache is about creating communities that create great software. The ASL is a minimum legal necessity that allows us to do this, nothing more. It promotes no political axe-grinding, and has no great philosophy that needs defending. The ASL, in fact, presents such a small conversational target that any licensing debate inevitably becomes what is wrong with license X. That inevitably leads to misunderstandings, holy wars and bad feeling, It's not productive, and not fun, and why we find licensing debates distasteful. In particular, it's not fun rubbishing the GPL. The reader is encouraged to read the GNU's philosophy pages (http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/). It is wonderful, high-minded stuff that most programmers instantly resonate with. Opposing RMS's vision of Free Software at first seems to be like kicking a puppy. But let's kick it anyway. It turns out that the puppy soon grows up to be a bulldog, biting and tenaciously hanging on to any code it can. Due to the GPL's extensive scope and 'viral' linking rules, GPL'ed code cannot be incorporated into proprietary software. It must all be copylefted, or none of it can be. In many cases, we at Apache find the GPL's virality a hindrance in *our* goal: creating communities that create code. This is because large parts of our community are selling custom solutions, not shrink-wrapped products sold in volume for general consumption. Essentially, selling software-based services, not software. When you're selling a service, releasing the code makes no sense to *anyone*. The code is mostly customer- or sector-specific, so is not reusable, and of little interest to fellow developers. The customer *certainly* doesn't want you publicising their code, breaking confidentiality agreements and potentially exposing security flaws to the world. Thus, to adopt a copyleft license like the GPL would alienate the service-oriented portion of our community. We want the widest possible audience, not for market share, but because the diverse input results in software with hybrid vigour, wide applicability and the kind of tough-as-nails quality we strive for. Thus, we encourage users to adopt non-copyleft licenses like the ASL for everyday code, as it increases the chances of code sharing and cooperation, ultimately leading to better software. For further information, please refer to the well-researched and well-written O'Reilly article entitled Working Without Copyleft, at http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/policy/2001/12/12/transition.html A good general reference of open source licenses is Bruce Perens' book Open Sources: Voices from the Open Source Revolution at http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/opensources/book/perens.html -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay?
-1 I'm not sure we need this at all. If it stopped after the first paragraph and didn't mention copyleft and GPL in the title I'd be -0. Shouldn't this really be an ASF level decision instead of a Jakarta level one? Marc Saegesser -Original Message- From: Jeff Turner [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Wednesday, March 06, 2002 3:47 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay? Hi, As promised, I've written up an ASL vs. GPL page, for possible inclusion on jakarta-site2. I've more tried to capture the spirit of the thing from the Apache POV, than duplicate the detailed arguments in the O'Reilly article referenced at the end. Please vote on whether you think the reasons outlined here are sufficiently representative. Constructive criticism and change suggestions welcome. If sufficiently approved of, I'll XMLify it and submit a patch. --Jeff Why prefer the ASL to a copyleft license (eg GPL)? -- This is an slightly distasteful topic for most Apache developers. The license is simply not a central part of the Apache philosophy. Apache is about creating communities that create great software. The ASL is a minimum legal necessity that allows us to do this, nothing more. It promotes no political axe-grinding, and has no great philosophy that needs defending. The ASL, in fact, presents such a small conversational target that any licensing debate inevitably becomes what is wrong with license X. That inevitably leads to misunderstandings, holy wars and bad feeling, It's not productive, and not fun, and why we find licensing debates distasteful. In particular, it's not fun rubbishing the GPL. The reader is encouraged to read the GNU's philosophy pages (http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/). It is wonderful, high-minded stuff that most programmers instantly resonate with. Opposing RMS's vision of Free Software at first seems to be like kicking a puppy. But let's kick it anyway. It turns out that the puppy soon grows up to be a bulldog, biting and tenaciously hanging on to any code it can. Due to the GPL's extensive scope and 'viral' linking rules, GPL'ed code cannot be incorporated into proprietary software. It must all be copylefted, or none of it can be. In many cases, we at Apache find the GPL's virality a hindrance in *our* goal: creating communities that create code. This is because large parts of our community are selling custom solutions, not shrink-wrapped products sold in volume for general consumption. Essentially, selling software-based services, not software. When you're selling a service, releasing the code makes no sense to *anyone*. The code is mostly customer- or sector-specific, so is not reusable, and of little interest to fellow developers. The customer *certainly* doesn't want you publicising their code, breaking confidentiality agreements and potentially exposing security flaws to the world. Thus, to adopt a copyleft license like the GPL would alienate the service-oriented portion of our community. We want the widest possible audience, not for market share, but because the diverse input results in software with hybrid vigour, wide applicability and the kind of tough-as-nails quality we strive for. Thus, we encourage users to adopt non-copyleft licenses like the ASL for everyday code, as it increases the chances of code sharing and cooperation, ultimately leading to better software. For further information, please refer to the well-researched and well-written O'Reilly article entitled Working Without Copyleft, at http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/policy/2001/12/12/transition.html A good general reference of open source licenses is Bruce Perens' book Open Sources: Voices from the Open Source Revolution at http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/opensources/book/perens.html -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay?
On Thu, Mar 07, 2002 at 08:46:51AM +1100, Jeff Turner wrote: Hi, As promised, I've written up an ASL vs. GPL page, for possible inclusion on jakarta-site2. ... Please vote on whether you think the reasons outlined here are sufficiently representative. Constructive criticism and change suggestions welcome. On second thoughts... I'm sure most of us are sick of the whole issue, and are NOT looking forward to another barrage of email on the subject :-) So preferably, keep replies to a simple vote and one-line explanation. Constructive criticism and change suggestions are still welcome, but let's keep that off-list as much as possible. --Jeff --Jeff Why prefer the ASL to a copyleft license (eg GPL)? -- ... -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay?
Jeff, Kudos for having the courage to proceed with this. Comments inline. At 08:46 07.03.2002 +1100, Jeff Turner wrote: Hi, As promised, I've written up an ASL vs. GPL page, for possible inclusion on jakarta-site2. I've more tried to capture the spirit of the thing from the Apache POV, than duplicate the detailed arguments in the O'Reilly article referenced at the end. Please vote on whether you think the reasons outlined here are sufficiently representative. Constructive criticism and change suggestions welcome. If sufficiently approved of, I'll XMLify it and submit a patch. --Jeff Why prefer the ASL to a copyleft license (eg GPL)? -- This is an slightly distasteful topic for most Apache developers. The license is simply not a central part of the Apache philosophy. Apache is about creating communities that create great software. The ASL is a minimum legal necessity that allows us to do this, nothing more. It promotes no political axe-grinding, and has no great philosophy that needs defending. The ASL, in fact, presents such a small conversational target that any licensing debate inevitably becomes what is wrong with license X. That inevitably leads to misunderstandings, holy wars and bad feeling, It's not productive, and not fun, and why we find licensing debates distasteful. The license is very much part of the Apache philosophy. It may even embody the essence of the philosophy. No need to be apologetic about discussing licensing. A good license is more valuable than a million lines of code. I maybe exaggerating but only a little. In particular, it's not fun rubbishing the GPL. The reader is encouraged to read the GNU's philosophy pages (http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/). It is wonderful, high-minded stuff that most programmers instantly resonate with. Opposing RMS's vision of Free Software at first seems to be like kicking a puppy. But let's kick it anyway. It turns out that the puppy soon grows up to be a bulldog, biting and tenaciously hanging on to any code it can. Due to the GPL's extensive scope and 'viral' linking rules, GPL'ed code cannot be incorporated into proprietary software. It must all be copylefted, or none of it can be. A bulldog? :-) In many cases, we at Apache find the GPL's virality a hindrance in *our* goal: to (not in) *our* goal? creating communities that create code. This is because large parts of our that write code? community are selling custom solutions, not shrink-wrapped products sold in volume for general consumption. Essentially, selling software-based services, not software. When you're selling a service, releasing the code makes no sense to *anyone*. The code is mostly customer- or sector-specific, so is not reusable, and of little interest to fellow developers. The customer *certainly* doesn't want you publicising their code, breaking confidentiality agreements and potentially exposing security flaws to the world. Hmm, are you sure we are only selling services? I dunno. Exposing security flaws to the world is very debatable. Most cryptographers consider security-by-obscurity as bad practice. I would drop the exposition argument. I found the ethics argument in the Reese-Stenberg article to be very powerful. The original author has no *absolute* right on extensions and improvements. The fact that I wrote 100 initial lines of code gives me no right, moral, ethical or otherwise to impose a license on the 10'000 lines that you subsequently write. I certainly have no rights on 10'000 lines of *unrelated* code! Thus, to adopt a copyleft license like the GPL would alienate the service-oriented portion of our community. We want the widest possible audience, not for market share, but because the diverse input results in software with hybrid vigour, wide applicability and the kind of tough-as-nails quality we strive for. The service orientation again. We can't know the exact motivations of developers for authoring open source code. Service-oriented software, maybe but maybe not. The service-orientation argument is correct, just not exhaustive. Thus, we encourage users to adopt non-copyleft licenses like the ASL for everyday code, as it increases the chances of code sharing and cooperation, ultimately leading to better software. What is meant by everyday code? For further information, please refer to the well-researched and well-written O'Reilly article entitled Working Without Copyleft, at http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/policy/2001/12/12/transition.html A good general reference of open source licenses is Bruce Perens' book Open Sources: Voices from the Open Source Revolution at http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/opensources/book/perens.html The Working Without Copyleft article is remarkably good. The point about the FSF controlling the LGPL is another very significant point: The Free Software Foundation controls the license. They can release a new version of the license, which
RE: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay?
At 16:17 06.03.2002 -0600, you wrote: -1 I'm not sure we need this at all. I disagree. I think we definitely need a solid document countering the idyllic but false world depicted by the FSF. It's just a gargantuan task to come up with a such a document. Regards, Ceki -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay?
I would love to see a document describes the Apache Software License, the philosophy behind it and why we think the ASL is a good thing. What I don't want is another tirade about why GPL sucks. There's enough of that out there already and getting into pissing match over licensing just doesn't seem productive. It would be good to have a basic Here's what we stand for... document with some pointers to other licenses and articles discussing licensing issues. Anything beyond that, I believe, belongs less in the realm of the Apache web site and more in the realm of a magazine article or blog discussion, etc. Let people come look at our licensing document and how simple and open it is, then let them go see the GPL document and read about all the things they won't be able to use, all the things they won't be able to do and all the things the FSF doesn't like. I think we win. Marc Saegesser -Original Message- From: Ceki Gülcü [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Wednesday, March 06, 2002 4:43 PM To: Jakarta General List Subject: RE: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay? At 16:17 06.03.2002 -0600, you wrote: -1 I'm not sure we need this at all. I disagree. I think we definitely need a solid document countering the idyllic but false world depicted by the FSF. It's just a gargantuan task to come up with a such a document. Regards, Ceki -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay?
On Wed, Mar 06, 2002 at 11:38:42PM +0100, Ceki Gülcü wrote: Jeff, Kudos for having the courage to proceed with this. Comments inline. :) It's not easy or fun. At 08:46 07.03.2002 +1100, Jeff Turner wrote: ... Why prefer the ASL to a copyleft license (eg GPL)? -- This is an slightly distasteful topic for most Apache developers. The license is simply not a central part of the Apache philosophy. Apache is about creating communities that create great software. The ASL is a minimum legal necessity that allows us to do this, nothing more. It promotes no political axe-grinding, and has no great philosophy that needs defending. The ASL, in fact, presents such a small conversational target that any licensing debate inevitably becomes what is wrong with license X. That inevitably leads to misunderstandings, holy wars and bad feeling, It's not productive, and not fun, and why we find licensing debates distasteful. The license is very much part of the Apache philosophy. It may even embody the essence of the philosophy. The license says, basically, do what you wan't, but don't sue us, don't abuse our name, and give credit where credit is due. That isn't much of a philosophy ;) It hints at the underlying importance we attach to the Apache name, but that's all. No need to be apologetic about discussing licensing. Not apologetic, just reflecting a general lack of keenness for licensing debates, because they usually end up in unproductive GNU-bashing. A good license is more valuable than a million lines of code. I maybe exaggerating but only a little. In particular, it's not fun rubbishing the GPL. The reader is encouraged to read the GNU's philosophy pages (http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/). It is wonderful, high-minded stuff that most programmers instantly resonate with. Opposing RMS's vision of Free Software at first seems to be like kicking a puppy. But let's kick it anyway. It turns out that the puppy soon grows up to be a bulldog, biting and tenaciously hanging on to any code it can. Due to the GPL's extensive scope and 'viral' linking rules, GPL'ed code cannot be incorporated into proprietary software. It must all be copylefted, or none of it can be. A bulldog? :-) Something with teeth :) But yes, bad analogy; will be removed. In many cases, we at Apache find the GPL's virality a hindrance in *our* goal: to (not in) *our* goal? agreed creating communities that create code. This is because large parts of our that write code? okay community are selling custom solutions, not shrink-wrapped products sold in volume for general consumption. Essentially, selling software-based services, not software. When you're selling a service, releasing the code makes no sense to *anyone*. The code is mostly customer- or sector-specific, so is not reusable, and of little interest to fellow developers. The customer *certainly* doesn't want you publicising their code, breaking confidentiality agreements and potentially exposing security flaws to the world. Hmm, are you sure we are only selling services? I dunno. I claimed that large parts of our community are selling services, not software. I don't know how true that is. I *suspect* it's true; that there are more consultants here than people banging out commercial code. I could be completely wrong. That's why it's so hard and dangerous to claim to speak for anyone but oneself. Exposing security flaws to the world is very debatable. Most cryptographers consider security-by-obscurity as bad practice. I would drop the exposition argument. Yes that was very much in my mind :) The detractors of security through obscurity are usually talking about large commercial software. When you have custom code written in a hurry on a tight budget, security holes inevitably arise, and security through obscurity is better than nothing. Though your first impression is how most people will see it, so I agree it should be removed. I found the ethics argument in the Reese-Stenberg article to be very powerful. The original author has no *absolute* right on extensions and improvements. The fact that I wrote 100 initial lines of code gives me no right, moral, ethical or otherwise to impose a license on the 10'000 lines that you subsequently write. I certainly have no rights on 10'000 lines of *unrelated* code! Indeed! But arguments of morality are even more treacherous than arguments of pure pragmatism. GNU proponents would surely argue that the means justifies the end. The goal of Software Freedom warrants a bit of arm-twisting. Thus, to adopt a copyleft license like the GPL would alienate the service-oriented portion of our community. We want the widest possible audience, not for market share, but because the diverse input results in software with hybrid vigour, wide applicability and the kind of tough-as-nails quality we strive for. The service orientation
RE: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay?
On Wed, 2002-03-06 at 19:52, Marc Saegesser wrote: I would love to see a document describes the Apache Software License, the philosophy behind it and why we think the ASL is a good thing. What I don't want is another tirade about why GPL sucks. There's enough of that out there already and getting into pissing match over licensing just doesn't seem productive. It would be good to have a basic Here's what we stand for... document with some pointers to other licenses and articles discussing licensing issues. Anything beyond that, I believe, belongs less in the realm of the Apache web site and more in the realm of a magazine article or blog discussion, etc. +1 - Total agreement. Let people come look at our licensing document and how simple and open it is, then let them go see the GPL document and read about all the things they won't be able to use, all the things they won't be able to do and all the things the FSF doesn't like. I think we win. But explain the basics and the basic difference. you have to do this, you can do this, you cant do this between say the top 3. I'll have to look again but I think the doc linked from the manual does this. Marc Saegesser -Original Message- From: Ceki Gülcü [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Wednesday, March 06, 2002 4:43 PM To: Jakarta General List Subject: RE: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay? At 16:17 06.03.2002 -0600, you wrote: -1 I'm not sure we need this at all. I disagree. I think we definitely need a solid document countering the idyllic but false world depicted by the FSF. It's just a gargantuan task to come up with a such a document. Regards, Ceki -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- http://www.superlinksoftware.com http://jakarta.apache.org - port of Excel/Word/OLE 2 Compound Document format to java http://developer.java.sun.com/developer/bugParade/bugs/4487555.html - fix java generics! The avalanche has already started. It is too late for the pebbles to vote. -Ambassador Kosh -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay?
on 3/6/02 4:52 PM, Marc Saegesser [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I would love to see a document describes the Apache Software License, the philosophy behind it and why we think the ASL is a good thing. Probably suggesting more content for this page would be a good idea: http://www.apache.org/foundation/licence-FAQ.html -jon -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay?
On Wed, 2002-03-06 at 20:28, Jon Scott Stevens wrote: on 3/6/02 4:52 PM, Marc Saegesser [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I would love to see a document describes the Apache Software License, the philosophy behind it and why we think the ASL is a good thing. Probably suggesting more content for this page would be a good idea: http://www.apache.org/foundation/licence-FAQ.html -jon +1 -- I just think that needs to be prominantly linked... I'm pretty satisfied with it. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- http://www.superlinksoftware.com http://jakarta.apache.org - port of Excel/Word/OLE 2 Compound Document format to java http://developer.java.sun.com/developer/bugParade/bugs/4487555.html - fix java generics! The avalanche has already started. It is too late for the pebbles to vote. -Ambassador Kosh -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay?
On Wed, Mar 06, 2002 at 07:47:49PM -0500, Andrew C. Oliver wrote: My opinion is you've come across just about as objective as Richard Stallman would be in the Microsoft Beta testing program. :- Pretending to be objective is not my strong point. No offense but this is EXACTLY the opposite of what is needed. Way too inflamatory, partisan and counter-productive to the target of just explaining to the confused as to what the differences are. My aim was not to give an exhaustive comparison. The O'Reilly and Perens pages do it much better than I could. I wanted to give an Apache-flavoured introduction to the debate, by introducing the main issue (GPL virality) and showing how that conflicted with Apache's community-orientedness. And then link to the real thing. I kinda think the link off of the Apache Manual was fine... +1 --Jeff -Andy On Wed, 2002-03-06 at 16:46, Jeff Turner wrote: Hi, As promised, I've written up an ASL vs. GPL page, for possible inclusion on jakarta-site2. ... -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: [VOTE] ASL vs. GPL page: is this okay?
On Wed, 2002-03-06 at 21:07, Jeff Turner wrote: On Wed, Mar 06, 2002 at 07:47:49PM -0500, Andrew C. Oliver wrote: My opinion is you've come across just about as objective as Richard Stallman would be in the Microsoft Beta testing program. :- Pretending to be objective is not my strong point. No offense but this is EXACTLY the opposite of what is needed. Way too inflamatory, partisan and counter-productive to the target of just explaining to the confused as to what the differences are. My aim was not to give an exhaustive comparison. The O'Reilly and Perens pages do it much better than I could. I wanted to give an Apache-flavoured introduction to the debate, by introducing the main issue (GPL virality) and showing how that conflicted with Apache's community-orientedness. And then link to the real thing. The question is: How do you want to spend your time? Possible answers: 1 Fighting an unwinnable (defined as the argument having a logical conclusion where one side overwhelmingly wins) religious war with the GNU hordes (hirds? hurds? ;-) ). . . 2 Coding and documenting I'd pick #2. Not scared of the Gnu, but *shrugs* no since in inciting a riot for no reason. Such doesn't do anything for Apache, but does do mounds for the GNU stuff... If you're just bored there are plenty of things for you to do for POI ;-) Anyhow, I DO applaud and appreciate you efforts... -Andy I kinda think the link off of the Apache Manual was fine... +1 --Jeff -Andy On Wed, 2002-03-06 at 16:46, Jeff Turner wrote: Hi, As promised, I've written up an ASL vs. GPL page, for possible inclusion on jakarta-site2. ... -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- http://www.superlinksoftware.com http://jakarta.apache.org - port of Excel/Word/OLE 2 Compound Document format to java http://developer.java.sun.com/developer/bugParade/bugs/4487555.html - fix java generics! The avalanche has already started. It is too late for the pebbles to vote. -Ambassador Kosh -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
ASL vs. GPL page?
Hi, Is there a page somewhere at apache.org, explaining why anyone would want to switch from GPL to ASL? The GNU.org site paints a very inspiring picture of a world of Free Software. It would be nice if there was an Apache equivalent somewhere explaining the Apache philosophy. This could be used as ammunition by people trying to convert useful GPL'ed projects. I'm sure many Jakarta members have found themselves in this situation. Personal perspective: I know I was quite shocked when I first heard someone here say GPL sucks (back in fighting-with-webmacro days:). I didn't know how to take it. What kind of philistine wouldn't want RMS's vision of Free Software to come true? It took me a long time (as a university student) to understand why the GPL truly does suck as a license for business use. So, a) is there anything out there already, and b) if not, anyone want to volunteer? :) I'm not very qualified, but could certainly provide something for a testimonial section. Here's a starting resource: http://www.oreillynet.com/lpt/a//policy/2001/12/12/transition.html Working Without Copyleft It's possible to be an ardent supporter of open source development and not be a fan of copyleft and the General Public License. In this article the authors -- software developers -- relate how they came to embrace copyleft, became disillusioned with its limitations, and consequently turned away from it. --Jeff -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: ASL vs. GPL page?
Send in a patch or write one it seems like you've researched the issue beyond *it sucks*. On Tue, 2002-03-05 at 06:16, Jeff Turner wrote: Hi, Is there a page somewhere at apache.org, explaining why anyone would want to switch from GPL to ASL? The GNU.org site paints a very inspiring picture of a world of Free Software. It would be nice if there was an Apache equivalent somewhere explaining the Apache philosophy. This could be used as ammunition by people trying to convert useful GPL'ed projects. I'm sure many Jakarta members have found themselves in this situation. You must realize that there are different objectives. It is the goal of GNU to get all software to use the GPL. It is not a goal of Apache to get all software covered by the APL. We're programmers, not lawyers. Most of make a living even writing software, not public speaking, etc. Personal perspective: I know I was quite shocked when I first heard someone here say GPL sucks (back in fighting-with-webmacro days:). I didn't know how to take it. What kind of philistine wouldn't want RMS's vision of Free Software to come true? It took me a long time (as a university student) to understand why the GPL truly does suck as a license for business use. So, a) is there anything out there already, and b) if not, anyone want to volunteer? :) I'm not very qualified, but could certainly provide something for a testimonial section. Naw, you're perfectly qualified. Write something, submit it and I'm sure someone will correct any mistakes. grab the jakarta-site2 module and submit a patch. use cvs diff -u -Andy Here's a starting resource: http://www.oreillynet.com/lpt/a//policy/2001/12/12/transition.html Working Without Copyleft It's possible to be an ardent supporter of open source development and not be a fan of copyleft and the General Public License. In this article the authors -- software developers -- relate how they came to embrace copyleft, became disillusioned with its limitations, and consequently turned away from it. --Jeff -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- http://www.superlinksoftware.com http://jakarta.apache.org - port of Excel/Word/OLE 2 Compound Document format to java http://developer.java.sun.com/developer/bugParade/bugs/4487555.html - fix java generics! The avalanche has already started. It is too late for the pebbles to vote. -Ambassador Kosh -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: ASL vs. GPL page?
Andrew C. Oliver [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: You must realize that there are different objectives. It is the goal of GNU to get all software to use the GPL. It is not a goal of Apache to get all software covered by the APL. We're programmers, not lawyers. That's why I wouldn't be that comfortable with a Why GPL sucks page... Political propaganda? Looks really like it... And IMO that's not what we're here to do... We're here to write software... Pier -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: ASL vs. GPL page?
Maybe it would be appropriate to direct questioners to http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/opensources/book/perens.html? This O'Reilly page provides a brief overview of a few open source models and offers a book for people with more in-depth questions. Mike George - Original Message - From: Pier Fumagalli [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: Jakarta General List [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, March 05, 2002 7:39 AM Subject: Re: ASL vs. GPL page? Andrew C. Oliver [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: You must realize that there are different objectives. It is the goal of GNU to get all software to use the GPL. It is not a goal of Apache to get all software covered by the APL. We're programmers, not lawyers. That's why I wouldn't be that comfortable with a Why GPL sucks page... Political propaganda? Looks really like it... And IMO that's not what we're here to do... We're here to write software... Pier -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
RE: ASL vs. GPL page?
Pier wrote: That's why I wouldn't be that comfortable with a Why GPL sucks page... Political propaganda? Looks really like it... And IMO that's not what we're here to do... We're here to write software... +1 IMO The licence is there to empower us, its not a product, its a by-product of the Way Things Are around here. It makes it possible for anyone to use, fork, extend and embed our code in OS, free, shareware or commercial products. If other licences are incompatible with this then that is an issue for them, it certainly is seldom a barrier in commercial licences ;), we shouldn't alienate anyone by setting ourselves up as some kind of authority and making political statements *except* where the issues impact upon the functioning or existence of the projects, like the JCP/JSPA issues. And anyway aren't licence issues beyond the remit of Jakarta? d. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: ASL vs. GPL page?
On Tue, 2002-03-05 at 07:39, Pier Fumagalli wrote: Andrew C. Oliver [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: You must realize that there are different objectives. It is the goal of GNU to get all software to use the GPL. It is not a goal of Apache to get all software covered by the APL. We're programmers, not lawyers. That's why I wouldn't be that comfortable with a Why GPL sucks page... Political propaganda? Looks really like it... And IMO that's not what we're here to do... We're here to write software... *shrugs* I was just saying if he wanted to point out the need for a APL vs GPL differences page etc, then he should just submit one and see if it flies. I'm prone to agree with you. Legal issues bore the living crap out of me...okay not all together true...I watch Law and Order...but that's about the extent of it ;-). Putting the page up would of course excite RMS people into a frenzy, but who cares (I have mail filters). If people want the info, let em have it. Pier -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- http://www.superlinksoftware.com http://jakarta.apache.org - port of Excel/Word/OLE 2 Compound Document format to java http://developer.java.sun.com/developer/bugParade/bugs/4487555.html - fix java generics! The avalanche has already started. It is too late for the pebbles to vote. -Ambassador Kosh -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: ASL vs. GPL page?
Danny Angus [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: And anyway aren't licence issues beyond the remit of Jakarta? Practically anyone has a word on the matter, as members are listening, but the legal decision (and legal obligations, bindings, restrictions, yadayadayada) are a privilege of members of the Foundation only, including what to do with the license... Pier -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: ASL vs. GPL page?
Andrew C. Oliver [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Tue, 2002-03-05 at 07:39, Pier Fumagalli wrote: Andrew C. Oliver [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: You must realize that there are different objectives. It is the goal of GNU to get all software to use the GPL. It is not a goal of Apache to get all software covered by the APL. We're programmers, not lawyers. That's why I wouldn't be that comfortable with a Why GPL sucks page... Political propaganda? Looks really like it... And IMO that's not what we're here to do... We're here to write software... *shrugs* I was just saying if he wanted to point out the need for a APL vs GPL differences page etc, then he should just submit one and see if it flies. I'm prone to agree with you. Legal issues bore the living crap out of me...okay not all together true...I watch Law and Order...but that's about the extent of it ;-). Putting the page up would of course excite RMS people into a frenzy, but who cares (I have mail filters). If people want the info, let em have it. A lot of what we think and why is on the web already... It's in the mail archives, in the presentations to different conferences, and so on... The word is out there, you just need to know where to look for... Pier -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: ASL vs. GPL page?
On Tue, 5 Mar 2002, Pier Fumagalli wrote: Danny Angus [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: And anyway aren't licence issues beyond the remit of Jakarta? Practically anyone has a word on the matter, as members are listening, but the legal decision (and legal obligations, bindings, restrictions, yadayadayada) are a privilege of members of the Foundation only, including what to do with the license... I came here for code, Java code :-) However there is a crowd discussing these things in depth at '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' - subscribe by sending a message to license-subscribe@... Dw -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Re: ASL vs. GPL page?
On Tue, 05 Mar 2002 14:09:23 Pier Fumagalli [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote. Andrew C. Oliver [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: A lot of what we think and why is on the web already... It's in the mail archives, in the presentations to different conferences, and so on... The word is out there, you just need to know where to look for... Right, obviously he sees a need for a more collected page. *shrug* I just told him *submit one* -- My personal opinion is that while a prominent page (fear of GNU backlash side) explaining the license would be helpful or just a prominant link to the O'Reilly article, I don't really see the need for GPL vs APL. A page that had that title would be more reflective of the GNU position on the subject. There is quite a bit of confusion on the license, I don't think a prominant page on it would be so controversial. I consider the statement you just need to know where to look for to be a symptom of improper information organization. Such things should be *easy* to find. Initiation into our community(ies?) has a higher barrier than I prefer, you can never have too much or too well organized documentation. (this is not to say that those who don't even read the web page before emailling committers gee is POI written in Java won't still be challenged...and thats a good thing, but that those who are just simple minded programmers like me looking for a place to code or who want to know do I have to donate my hello-world app based on to look. Pier -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: ASL vs. GPL page?
Jeff == Jeff Turner [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: Jeff Here's a starting resource: Jeff http://www.oreillynet.com/lpt/a//policy/2001/12/12/transition.html this link produced a (ouch) 500 response from oreilly. I was able to find another link that worked: http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/policy/2001/12/12/transition.html -- joe -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]