On 11/26/2012 08:29 PM, Chris Adams wrote:
Once upon a time, Ralf Corsepius <rc040...@freenet.de> said:
Well, dlopen'ed modules/plugins aren't directly linked, i.e. there is
only an indirect dependency. AFAICT (IANAL), this is what makes the
legal key-difference.
IANAL either, but neither is what matters in the legal sense; "derived
work" is what matters.  Linking is just an indicator (that is not 100%)
of a derived work.

As for when the linking is done, (static at build, dynamic at load,
dynamic during run), that makes zero difference as to whether something
is a derived work.


Hi.

It might be meaningful to ask this question broadly: How can be two programs related and still not violate the "derivative work under copyright law" thing? (law of US/EU/international/any important country) When are they independent and when a new combined work emerges? Two distinct files dynamically linked together violate, yet one Fedora iso file bundling both does not violate - why? As stated before, linking is probably irrelevant. Bits in symbol table originating from the other file are references - references are generally permitted. AFAIK copyright law does not care about functionality. Just text, translation and modification.

Please, enlighten me.

Frantisek Kluknavsky
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