On Sat, 2003-11-15 at 11:24, Brian T. Sniffen wrote: > The patent prevents you from solving the covered problem, no matter > how you come to that solution. So the unlawfullness of integrating > the patented method into the parsing of your favorite text editor has > nothing to do with the web server. Saying that the webserver's code > is thus unfree -- attributing the unlawfulness to the method by which > you became aware of the unlawful option -- seems wrong to me.
I disagree, depending on circumstances. For example, when the LZW patents were still valid, I could not (legally) modify Gimp to produce normal GIFs. That didn't make Gimp non-free, it made the US and various other countries non-free. However, if, for example, a company releases under the MIT X11 license a program that does A, but also patents doing A --- and enforces that patent --- then A is not free software. If they grant a limitless license to the patent, it becomes free again. I think you must look at the entire picture --- not just the copyright one --- to determine if software is free. I don't think its free if the copyright holder decides to use patents, instead of copyright, to limit your freedoms. In short: * If party A releases software, and in some maner prevents you from excercising your DFSG-freedoms, then that software is not DFSG-free. It doesn't matter if that manner is copyright, patent, or the mafia. * If party A releases software, and allows you all your DFSG-freedoms but an unrelated party B does not allow you to modify it to, e.g., play DVDs, party A's software is still free. To put it yet another way, you can't use patents as an end-run around freeness.
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