On Wed, Jul 14, 2004 at 07:52:14PM +0100, Matthew Garrett wrote: > Brian Thomas Sniffen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >Matthew Garrett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> >> But the QPL doesn't require that any changes include your name. It's > >> possible to provide those modifications to the general public without > >> being traceable. It doesn't seem any riskier to the dissident than the > >> GPL's provisions. > >The dissident test is not about protecting dissidents from their evil > >governments. It is about protecting them from copyright infringement > >claims for sane things they did while in the grip of their evil > >governments. The QPL allows some evil government to come after the > >dissident for failure to disclose his works when under their control. Er, this quote from Brian seems to have turned the dissident test on its head. It's not about protecting dissidents from copyright infringement claims at all, it's about protecting them from being *drawn and quartered* by their government as a byproduct of complying with the license. The problem with the QPL is that it allows a government that monitors all international correspondence to identify and murder those dissidents who are complying with the license. > The dissident test only makes any sense at all because it suggests that > certain license provisions will result in bad things happening to the > dissident if he complies with them. I am unconvinced that following the > QPL's requirements would increase the risk any more than following the > GPL's requirements. The GPL allows some evil government to come after > the dissident if he thinks that it's too dangerous to give his source > code to recipients of binaries. Given the above, there is a big difference between communicating source code to those you're already choosing to distribute binaries to given whatever secure means you have, and communicating source code to an untrusted third party. I can't think of any danger arising from distributing source with binaries that couldn't reasonably be addressed by sanitizing the code in question to hide its authorship. Copyleft also doesn't concern itself with contributors being branded idiot programmers based on the quality of their code, and I find this to be entirely sensible. -- Steve Langasek postmodern programmer