"Joe Moore" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Joe Wreschnig said: >> On Tue, 2003-08-05 at 05:46, Joe Moore wrote: >>> Joe Wreschnig said: >>> > On Mon, 2003-08-04 at 14:37, Joe Moore wrote: >>> >> How is that harder with the FDL "History" section than with the >>> >> "clearly marked" BSD code, or the GPL-required changelog? >>> > >>> > The document trail in "History" may not exist anymore (or may be >>> > inadaquate); you can't just say "Oh, this Invariant Section didn't >>> > exist 2 years ago; I'll take it out and pretend I had that version." >>> > You need to actually have a license for that version. >>> >>> In other words, it is not at all harder with documents under the GFDL, >>> than it is with source under BSD, or the [L]GPL. >> >> You can extract the BSD-licensed code from the proprietary code, and >> use only it. There's no requirement in the BSD-licensed code that you >> must distribute proprietary code that it was linked to at one point. > > And that is exactly the same as what is required by the GFDL. > > If you know that paragraph X was in the FooWare manual before EvilCo added > its invariant section, then you can distribute paragraph X without EvilCo's > invariant section. (assuming you fulfill the rest of the requirements of > the GFDL invoked by the FooWare manual from before EvilCo's modification)
That's not true. The BSD license is granted to all third parties, so if I find a section of some proprietary code I know was written by UCB, I can just take that section. The GFDL is a license only to the recipient, so in order to take a free section from an older version, I'd need to have received that version. -Brian -- Brian T. Sniffen [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.evenmere.org/~bts/