First, FPC is perfectly usable by itself and comes with an IDE.

Second Lazarus is an advanced IDE to generate programs. While Lazarus
itself is GPL, the programs that it generates are not subject to the
GPL, but to LGPL with modifications, as the normal FPC license. So there
people could surely get hurt with this. Specially since a lot of users
on Linux are ex-Kylixers with their commercial packages.

But the main point is that due to a copyright issue that was brought to
our attention by Borland/Codegear, we rewrote significant parts of the
RTL, and agreed with Borland to take the old , encumbered parts down.
Codegear was all friendly but firm about it, and we wanted to respond
similarly.

It is then frustrating to see releases done with the encumbered code
almost two and an half  months (August 11th) after this release, while
we retracted all these versions on August 11th.

And yes, mea culpa. I should have started kicking people earlier, maybe
mail legal at canonical  since  package maintainers might not always
read release manifests, release comments  on the site and in general not
have an idea on what goes on.

On the other hand, the release manifest does mention a copyright
dispute, and with whom, and is quoted in the post of 30-09. Moreover,
the GPL escape is not mentioned till now by me (since not publically
know). So to be honest I'm a bit surprised, how lax the distributions
react to copyright disputes clearly annotated and known.

-- 
Please sync fpc 2.2.2-3 (universe) with patch from bug #260464
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/275688
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