According to John Hasler: > Chip Salzenberg writes: > > I'm not dismissing you. I'm pointing to the real culprits that have made > > this clause of the APSL *necessary*. > > You have a legal opinion on this? Case law? Relevant statutes?
"Ya got me." No, I don't. But the OSI has a lawyer at our disposal, so I'll seek one. > > Individuals and pseudo-individuals like corportations should be trusted > > in varying degrees according to their individual characters. > > Publicly held corporations can be trusted only to obey the law and honor > their contracts. Oh, I agree entirely. The law and most corporate charters actually make it a crime for corporate officers to do 'the right thing' if that 'right thing' loses money, or makes less money than 'the wrong thing' would. > ... [New] people who believe that much or all of what their predecessors > did was wrong. This sort of thing happens not infrequently in the computer > industry. Consider, to pick an example entirely at random, Apple. *youch* That one made contact. -- Chip Salzenberg - a.k.a. - <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> "When do you work?" "Whenever I'm not busy."