Re: Why is Fedora not a Free GNU/Linux distributions?

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Mikkel L. Ellertson wrote:

Maybe that is because you are looking at it as a developer, and not as an end user. It is the freedom of the end users that is being preserved.

No, that is exactly backwards. Since the GPL only prohibits redistribution, a developer is perfectly free to combine components as he wants for his own use. Or companies that can afford it can hire a developer to do this in custom code that is not redistributed. It's the end users that aren't developers and can only afford things distributed at mass market prices that lose any chance of benefits. They just never even see it.

Explain the problem.

End user needs code containing many GPL'd routines plus some routines only available under different licensing. The functionality of windows media player would be one such example - or perhaps the netflix player that depends on it. Sometimes you can work around this with a plug-in-interface (which still leaves the GPL requirements in question); sometimes you can't. When you can't, the end user pays the cost of re-implementing all of the functionality that might otherwise have been provided by well-tested code under the GPL. And even when this can be done with a plug-in interface, it is still problematic for an individual end user to obtain the needed licensed modules compared to a vendor obtaining a bulk deal and rolling it into the price of the product.

If it is for his/her own use, then he is an end user. The company is also an end user, and because the source is available, they can afford to develop custom code. It is just the developer that wants to take GPL protected code, modify it, and sell it that faces restrictions. In the cases you list, the GPL does not make it more or less likely that the code will be released.


Do you believe that OS X could have been built on Linux instead of freebsd code? I don't know the internals but would assume that they have added parts that are under license from others or covered by patents and cannot be released under the GPL. In any case it would not seem wise for any business to start a project knowing that they would never be able to include components licensed from third parties under any terms they might find agreeable.

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   Les Mikesell
    lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx

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