> I really wish that Linux could get past the everything-must-be-GPL > attitude. well it's the GPL license that says that all kernel parts must be GPL. You don't have to accept the GPL license, in fact you're free to reject it. (but do read about the consequences in the license text) > The GPL is great, free, Free software is great, but it > doesn't work for some companies, especially when hardware and IP are > concerned. well what you propose is basically the BSD license. Now go ask yourself why BSD isn't where linux is today in terms of market share. A big part of that is ... the GPL license. By forcing everyone to give back their improvements, the core gets better. Unlike the BSD world where there are many parties that keep their own improvements binary as "IP and added value", with the result that the core doesn't improve from them. But it's open drivers also that allow people to run newer versions on their older hardware. The windows world doesn't have this; I have had to throw away 2 scanners so far for example because newer windows versions don't support them (well I didn't throw them away, I moved them to linux boxes ;-). Mice, sound cards, USB devices etc etc same deal. The vendor stops caring after he stops selling it (and often no longer exists even). Oh well, I guess this now classifies me as a GPL terrorist because I don't agree with you and say things that might take your precious nvidia card away from linux.... well I've been called worse ;) -- fedora-test-list mailing list fedora-test-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-test-list