On Fri, 4 Jun 2004 11:46:51 +0200 Bernhard R. Link wrote: > * Henning Makholm <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [040602 16:42]: > > If you want to *download* the sofware, then you'd better do it by > > the GPL's terms.[...] > > If you log on some computer and make a copy there and transmit it to > you (like ssh'ing into a solaris box and copying /bin/true), this may > be true. > > But normally someone set up a computer do make a copy and sent it to > me, if I request it. As when someone makes copies of a CD and sends > them to me, when I send him a postcard.
I agree. Henning, consider how, say, the HTTP protocol works: an HTTP server serves some content upon my *request*. I send a GET /path/lbreakout2_2.2.2-1woody1_i386.deb to the web server, it processes my request (this choice of word is not a coincidence!), determines if I have permission to get that resource and serves a response to me. The response may contain a 403 forbidden error code, or a copy of $DOCUMENTROOT/path/lbreakout2_2.2.2-1woody1_i386.deb Is that any different (from a legal point of view) from visiting one friend of mine, seeing that she has a great game installed on her Debian Woody machine, *asking* her "May I have a copy of the deb package?" and going back home with a floppy disk containing lbreakout2_2.2.2-1woody1_i386.deb? My friend is the one who is making the copy. In the HTTP example, the copy is being made by server, that is (from a legal standpoint) by the person who put online the file. In the HTTP example, you can also consider the case in which the response contains dynamically-generated content: that content may be a derived work of something (a template, perhaps...). Do you claim that *I* am the person who generated that content? I don't even necessarily have access to the template! I think that derivation is made by the server: after all, they are called *server-side* scripting languages... -- | GnuPG Key ID = DD6DFCF4 | You're compiling a program Francesco | Key fingerprint = | and, all of a sudden, boom! Poli | C979 F34B 27CE 5CD8 DC12 | -- from APT HOWTO, | 31B5 78F4 279B DD6D FCF4 | version 1.8.0
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