On 2015-06-08 13:36, Pontus Pihlgren wrote:
On Mon, Jun 08, 2015 at 01:24:39PM +0200, Johnny Billquist wrote:

Which is essentially anyone. Since, if you do release it, you cannot
restrict who can use it.

The point I'm trying to make is that B has no obligation to anyone but
C. If C starts to make the software available no-one can demand the
source from B. And certainly not from A.

Not entirely correct. First of all, C can ask the sources from B, who then in turn will be required to request the sources from A. So C indirectly puts a request through to A anyway.

However, if C have the software from B, but wants the sources from A, C just gets the distribution from A, and then they can request the sources explicitly from A anyway. There is no way for A to prevent this.
So yes, C can easily, and legally, force A to send the sources to them.

        Johnny

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