On Friday 05 July 2002 11:28 pm, Voltage Spike wrote: > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > Hash: SHA1 > > On Friday 05 July 2002 20:43, Dennis Kibbe wrote: > > Using that logic it would be OK for M$ to take GPLed code and incorporate > > it in XP and not tell. No "real" harm done, right? > > > > You make it sound as if a wrong is a wrong only if blood is spillt. > > What if they have? Do you know about it? Is anybody hurt because of it > (besides the author's feelings)? > > Besides, the way you quoted made me look bad. ;-) I had stated that it > was not an inherint wrong. It is a victimless crime, and we do it every > day. If I tell you a funny joke, and you tell someone else, should I go > around saying you have "wronged" me? 99.9% of our ideas come from others, > but we don't go around giving out slips of paper crediting every entity we > had ever come into contact with. > > It is a tough situation, and it all comes down to respect. In the case of > copyright infringement like we have been discussing, the only "wrong" is > that we did respect the author's wishes. I try to be a better person than > that, but that doesn't mean everyone has to agree. > > - -- > Voltage Spike My fear is that as Linux gains a foothold in business (and with the general public) there will be more pressure to "bend the rules" in the name of profit. By that I mean look the other way if the GPL is violated. If, say, UnitedLinux became as much of a monopoly as Windows, and evolved into a product that was licensed per seat, could we all end up illegally "sharing" Linux with our neighbors? In the past I've "shared" Photoshop and PageMaker, but I don't any more for these reasons. 1. I run Linux :-) (I know, not everything in commercial distros is GPL) 2. If I want others to respect the terms of the GPL, I better respect other licenses as well otherwise I'd be a hypocrite. 3. Playing by the rules of proprietary licenses forces me to think about the freedoms I'm giving up when I use proprietary software. 4. It gives me an opportunity to spread the gospel according to RMS. - Dennis