JamesBond@ge
|
2011-03-02
, 20:07
|
Banned |
Posts: 726 |
Thanked: 497 times |
Joined on Aug 2010
@ Gravesend, UK
|
#201
|
|
2011-03-02
, 20:08
|
Banned |
Posts: 726 |
Thanked: 497 times |
Joined on Aug 2010
@ Gravesend, UK
|
#202
|
|
2011-03-02
, 20:14
|
Banned |
Posts: 726 |
Thanked: 497 times |
Joined on Aug 2010
@ Gravesend, UK
|
#203
|
anyone else notice that the second abill_uk showed up ericsson was nowhere to be found? i have a theory: they are the same person. abill_uk is ericsson when he runs out of meds and whatever little hint of logic that was there goes out the window completely. also grammar and punctuation skills practically vanish. same combative attitude and aversion to facts though. a fascinating case study, really.
|
2011-03-02
, 22:27
|
Posts: 45 |
Thanked: 20 times |
Joined on Jul 2010
|
#204
|
This affects much more than just the GPL. Even some of Microsoft's own open source licenses are excluded.
Sure there are some licenses that are considered open source that are acceptable to MS, as mentioned on the article above. But, those are not the licenses that most FOSS coders like to use.
People who knowingly restrict themselves from this are either ignorant or too imprisoned already by non-free software.
Maybe we should start to use the term copyleft more often to avoid confusion.
|
2011-03-02
, 22:41
|
Posts: 1,746 |
Thanked: 2,100 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
|
#205
|
Freedom is great but it seems that there still is no consumer-level free platform that can match the user experience provided by the less free commercial solutions
and it seems the vast majority of people prefer that and restrict themselves to everything that isn't a restrictive OSS license because the benefit simply isn't there (at least for them).
|
2011-03-02
, 23:13
|
Banned |
Posts: 974 |
Thanked: 622 times |
Joined on Oct 2010
|
#206
|
The flipside of that is that the benefit isn't there for the majority of people. Freedom is great but it seems that there still is no consumer-level free platform that can match the user experience provided by the less free commercial solutions and it seems the vast majority of people prefer that and restrict themselves to everything that isn't a restrictive OSS license because the benefit simply isn't there (at least for them).
|
2011-03-03
, 00:22
|
Posts: 45 |
Thanked: 20 times |
Joined on Jul 2010
|
#207
|
"Restrictive" and "OSS" do not belong in the same sentence. Anyone who tells you they do, doesn't understand them.
In general permissive licenses tend to be compatible with other licenses and restrictive ones do not. For example it is easier to include code from the MIT license in other projects than it is to include code that is licensed under the GPL v2 or later.
|
2011-03-03
, 00:25
|
Posts: 1,746 |
Thanked: 2,100 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
|
#208
|
Well then why is the GPL considered an OSS license then? Can you use GPL code in any way that you want? No, it places *restrictions* on how you can use that code.
|
2011-03-03
, 00:33
|
Posts: 45 |
Thanked: 20 times |
Joined on Jul 2010
|
#209
|
No, it doesn't. It places restrictions on the redistribution of that code.
You can use the code anyway you'd like, internally, but you can't distribute it (which is what Copyright defines.)
|
2011-03-03
, 01:48
|
|
Posts: 1,986 |
Thanked: 7,698 times |
Joined on Dec 2010
@ Dayton, Ohio
|
#210
|
"Restrictive" and "OSS" do not belong in the same sentence. Anyone who tells you they do, doesn't understand them.
Tags |
bada rox, give me bada, meego rules, sir abill sir !, windowsce blows |
|