Gordon Messmer wrote:
Les Mikesell wrote:
Its not that simple. Say you receive a copy of a mostly bsd-origin
work previously modified by adding a few GPL-covered lines and
applying the GPL to the whole as required for #3 at that step. You
now agree to the GPL terms in order to be permitted to give someone
else a copy of the whole work.
Yes, that is true for the "work as a whole".
At this point, you've agreed not to pick out parts of the code and
distribute under the license of its origin.
That's not true. Even if the terms of the GPL *said* that it was true,
copyright law doesn't allow it that power. You cannot change the
license on a work for which you are not the copyright holder.
It doesn't change the license, it denies the right to share the GPL
covered portions if you don't apply the GPL terms to the whole. If you
can ignore the GPL and do what you want completely under other terms (as
on a completely dual-licensed work or picking out only a separately
licensed file instead of the rest) you can use the other license. If
you need to copy a GPL-only portion, you must agree to apply GPL terms
to the whole to get that right.
--
Les Mikesell
lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx
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