MJ Ray <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > I'm afraid that is a revisionist interpretation. First, Mozilla is > > certainly intended to be "Open Source", which is essentially the same > > as > > what Debian means by "free": > > The jury seems out on that. They could mean *anything* by "Open > Source". http://mjr.towers.org.uk/writing/ambigopen.html > > Even assuming they mean OSI's OSD and not whatever fuzzy idea, OSI > seem to have a very different process to Debian and don't seem > concerned with the four freedoms at all.
In this case Mozilla/Netscape seems to really mean the usual old open source. They wanted people, from the beginning, to use, modify, and redistribute the source code to the Netscape web browser. Here's ESR's take on that situation: http://www.catb.org/%7Eesr/writings/cathedral-bazaar/cathedral-bazaar/a r01s13.html Here's what the Mozilla FAQ says about their open-ness: "1.1. For whom is Mozilla 1.5 intended? Mozilla 1.5 is for everyone. And we mean everyone. Mozilla is open source, which means it is made possible by a large community of developers, supporters, and users like you. While you enjoy our software, please consider joining and contributing to the Mozilla community. We also welcome anybody to freely alter and redistribute Mozilla under the terms of the Mozilla Public Licence." -- http://www.mozilla.org/start/1.5/faq/general.html#audience Note that GPL gets no mention at all, and that MPL is treated as the vehicle for the openness. Finally, here it is from Netscape themselves: "On January 22, 1998, in another unprecedented move, Netscape announced that it would make the source code to its flagship client software, Netscape Communicator, freely available for modification and redistribution on the Internet." -- http://wp.netscape.com/browsers/future/whitepaper.html -Lex