On Wed, 12 Mar 2003, der.hans wrote: > Am 12. Mar, 2003 schw=E4tzte Jeremy C. Reed so: > > > I guess the distinction is not whether it is really commercial or not, = but > > if an end-product became entirely proprietary. Any examples? > > A couple of switch vendors, e.g. Juniper, use *BSD as their base with > proprietary drivers for their hardware. There's also OS X. There have bee= n > at least a few embedded products that were based on proprietary *BSD > releases. Probably most of them died in the last couple of years. Yes, I know about many proprietary examples of BSD-licensed code. For what it's worth: most of the BSD code used in Mac OS X is still publically available and freely available (depending on the definition of "free") in the Darwin OS project. My point was that a lot of non-BSD code is "commercial" too. > > Anyways, where is the detailed list of technologies (intellectual > > property) that was used? > > > > I would like to compare with the old 4.4BSD-Lite which I still look at. > > Are the *BSD systems subject to the same claims? That is what I am curious about: What are the claims? If anyone is concerned, alternative code may be (or probably is) already available in the *BSD families. There were already BSD and UNIX lawsuits in early 1990's. Jeremy C. Reed http://www.bsdnewsletter.com/