On Tue, 11 Mar 2003, Thomas Bushnell, BSG wrote: > This unfortunately is not satisfactory. See on the main JpGraph page > the actual license grant: > > ] JpGraph is released under a dual license. > ] > ] QPL 1.0 (Qt Free Licensee) For non-commercial, open-source and > ] educational use and JpGraph Professional License for commercial use. > ] > ] Basically it means that if you or your company develops non open > ] source software and have financial gains, either directly or > ] indirectly (for example by improving a business process), by using > ] JpGraph this counts as commercial use. > > So if you are IBM, say, and you get any financial gain because you use > JpGraph to prepare reports, then you are a "commercial use", and you > are not allowed to distribute under the QPL.
I agree. The terms of the copyright statement clearly make it non-free, because it violates DFSG #6 and #7. [No discrimination against fields of endeavor, and the distribution of license clause. {The license we distribute it under must apply to everyone who we can distribute it to.}] If the comercial license was somehow free, this would satisfy #6, but it still wouldn't satisfy #7. [It's not truely dual licensed either. It's one license for one group, and another license for another group.] Don Armstrong -- "I was thinking seven figures," he said, "but I would have taken a hundred grand. I'm not a greedy person." [All for a moldy bottle of tropicana.] -- Sammi Hadzovic [in Andy Newman's 2003/02/14 NYT article.] http://www.nytimes.com/2003/02/14/nyregion/14EYEB.html http://www.donarmstrong.com http://www.anylevel.com http://rzlab.ucr.edu
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