* Freek Dijkstra <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [040809 13:42]: > 2. Is the netatalk upstream author correct that he cannot reasonably make > the exception (without asking all possible contributors)
Not if he want to still use code for which he only has GPL as licence allowing him to incorporate it. > PS: to play the devils advocate on this list: is this [EMAIL PROTECTED]&$(%$ > really > necessary for me as an end-user to get open-source software to work? I'd > rather had spend all this time doing something *useful*. Well, free software is normaly built upon taking copyright very seriously. Be it from the "we have to subvert copyright by copyleft to abolish it" or from the "author's rights are human rights, but I will allow anyone to benefit from my software if they behave well w.r.t. ..." camp, each leads to care about the exact rights you get much more than making propietary software. And now there is a amount of programmers who allowed their code be used under GPL. Many won't care, many would explicitly allow when asked, but they all contributed - formaly seen - under a licence normaly considered to demand all of the program to not "impose any furhter restrictions on the recipients' exercise of the rights granted herein". And as the number of people who dislike those parts of the OpenSSL licence causing problems is inot negligible, it is likely that there are people who intended what they perhaps did, to disallow derived versions having such restrictions in them. So there is this demand not to mix with OpenSSL, that some might even have intended. Legally there remains the question if the GPL is enforcable with respect to dynamic linking, but disrespecting peoples wishes what should happen with their code due to problems in the licence is still dangerous style. Yes, this situation sucks. I really wished it would vanish soon by common usage of gnutls. I hope the change to LGPL was not too late to finaly see some solution in the future. Hochachtungsvoll, Bernhard R. Link