Scripsit Don Armstrong <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > On Thu, 27 Nov 2003, Henning Makholm wrote:
> > Remember that we're talking about the non-standard situation where > > the object code *itself* is "the Program" to which the copyright > > holder applied the GPL. > Sure, and I'm arguing that because you're distributing only object or > executable code, not source, Section 3 applies. Section 3 applies if you want the rights secion 3 gives you. If you can get the rights you need from some other source (in this case: section 2) you don't need to worry about section 2. The sections are independent grants of rights. > It's the only permision grant that specifically covers what you are > distributing, In our hypothetical case, section 2 specifically covers what's being distributed to, because what's being distributed is "the Program", which is what section 2 specifically applies to. > I'm fairly confident that this is similar to Eben Moglen's > interpretation of the license, but perhaps you should ask him to > clarify it for you? I don't see any reason to bother him with this. If you think it is worth his time to spell out what's plainly there in the license for you, go ahead. -- Henning Makholm "`Update' isn't a bad word; in the right setting it is useful. In the wrong setting, though, it is destructive..."