Scripsit Branden Robinson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > [NOTE: This is a personal opinion.]
> I think patch clauses are onerous, too; I happen to agree personally, but since the DFSG #4 allows them pretty explicitly it's not something that we could honestly use to declare a license non-DFSG-free. Unless someone goes through the hassle of devising a way to change the DFSG... > Dual-licensing under the GPL and QPL appeared to be good enough for > Trolltech, so presumably the same reasoning that they used when > making that decision will be persuasive to other users of the QPL. The licensing of the software in question, oCaml, turns out to be sligtly more complex than apparent from Barak's initial post. It consists of a compiler and a runtime module (bytecode interpreter + libraries). The compiler is under QPL. The runtime module is under LGPL plus an explicit permission to link non-LGPL things to it. I haven't yet figured out how this permission goes beyond what the LGPL itself says. Given that the component covered by the QPL is just the compiler, it seems that there is no reason why QPL 6 is even relevant for that particular piece of sofware. -- Henning Makholm "... not one has been remembered from the time when the author studied freshman physics. Quite the contrary: he merely remembers that such and such is true, and to explain it he invents a demonstration at the moment it is needed."