> -----Original Message----- > From: Bradley M. Kuhn <bkuhn@xxxxxxx> > > [ Full Disclosure: I've written parts of copyleft-next, have been involved > with the initiative basically since its inception, and obviously I like the > license a lot. Take my comments with the recommend dose NaCl granules > those facts require. ] > > Greg KH wrote: > > Any chance you wish to just change the license of these files, given that > > you are the only one that has tried to use it for kernel code? > > There is a lot of dual-licensed (GPLv2-only|{2,3}-Clause-BSD) code already in > Linux. Many corporate copyright holders have well documented strong reasons > for wanting that. (Those policy goals and the analysis behind them, I find > problematic and sometimes outright wrong, but nonetheless it's their right to > license their copyrights that way, and the license *is* GPLv2-only > compatible, as is Luis'!). > > I assume that you're not asking those companies to relicense to pure > GPLv2-only. While those companies perhaps faced early resistance when they > began their dual-licensing-in-upstream endeavor, it was ultimately accepted > and that opens the door, IMO, to accepting any form of GPL-compatible > dual-licensing upstream. There is no cogent argument that I can see that > says “(GPLv2-only|{2,3}-Clause-BSD) is so special that it should be > grandfathered in over other forms of dual licensing”. > > (Ironically, IIRC, (then acting on behalf of Qualcomm/Atheros, Luis — the > person proposing the (GPLv2-only|copyleft-next) dual-licensing *now* was a > champion of upstreaming (GPLv2-only|{2,3}-Clause-BSD) code years ago before > it was a wide and common practice.) > > > As a follow-up to this, I do not want to see your "test_sysfs.c" module as > > a dual-licensed file, as that makes no sense whatsoever. It is directly > > testing GPL-v2-only code, so the attempt to dual license it makes no sense > > to me. How could anyone take that code and do anything with it under the > > copyleft-next license only? And where would that happen? > > But, it's a valid compatible license, so there is no harm. And, see below, > regarding policy reasons … > > > I understand the appeal of copyleft-next in that it resolves many of the > > "grey" areas around gplv2, but given that no one is rushing to advise us to > > relicense all of the kernel with this thing, > > Consider me to be the first to advise that! I realize it's a tough thing to > do, but every great adventure to solve a big problem starts with a first > step! I further realize it's a non-starter, but please don't say again no > one has advised you such! > > BTW, the only reason I didn't advise it because I know a top-level license > change away from straight, no-exceptions/no-additional-permissions GPLv2-only > is a non-starter for the Linux community. (Great, BTW, that you've stuck so > firmly to your steadfast plan on this!) > > Greg continued: > > there is no need to encourage the spread of it given the added complexity > > and confusion that adding another license to our mix can only cause. > Relatedly, Christoph asked (footnote mine): > >> Why do we need a random weirdo [0] license in the kernel tree? Is there > >> any benefit? > > To be frank, we in the copyleft-next community were very excited to learn > that such dual-licensed code had been added to upstream Linux, back when it > was many years ago. It's a vote of confidence from a well-known developer > who really is excited about our policy goals. FOSS licensing isn't just > about simplicity and cleanliness. Like budgets, which seem dry topics on > surface, they are actual moral documents that make a statement about the > philosophy and aspirations for software freedom by the licensor. Of course, > we all know it's completely symbolic to dual license > (GPLv2-only|copyleft-next), just like it's purely symbolic to dual license > (GPLv2-only|2-Clause-BSD) upstream [1]. It's not at all purely symbolic to dual license (GPLv2-only|2-Clause-BSD). That dual-licensing has allowed the interchange of a lot of code between the BSD Unixes and Linux, that otherwise would not have happened. It's very much in the spirit of Linus' tit-for-tat compact to allow the BSD Unixes to benefit from improvements made to code that originated there and made it's way to Linux. -- Tim > But it makes a statement that I > think is a good one. > > Finally, while GPLv2-only compatibility has been a mainstay so far in > copyleft-next drafting, it's not clear to me that we can keep that > compatibility forever and reach copyleft-next's policy goals. There's been > no discussion of this yet, but it's certainly in the realm of possibility. > If GPLv2-incompatibility ultimately happens in future copyleft-next versions, > having dual-licensed code out there will be a huge help as it will assure > that code can forever be used both on GPLv2-only and copyleft-next sides of > future single-license-project equations. > > Thanks for listening; of course it's the sole prerogative for the copyright > holder to decide whether to change the license of their code or not, and I > hope that they don't bow to pressure, just as Qualcomm wouldn't bow to > pressure if you started asking them to stop dual licensing all their upstream > Linux code under BSD licenses. > > [0] BTW, Christoph, I remember when I started in FOSS in the early 1990s, > everyone called the GPL a “random weirdo license”. The incumbent always > seems not as random and weirdo as the challenger. > > [1] There is the argument that 2-Clause-BSD has fewer requirements than > GPLv2-only; however, that's not an argument to release the code > *upstream* that way, it's an argument to release a separate version under > 2-Clause-BSD. > > -- > Bradley M. Kuhn - he/him > > Pls. support the charity where I work, Software Freedom Conservancy: > https://sfconservancy.org/supporter/