On Tue, 14 Feb 2006, Stephen Frost wrote:
* Marc G. Fournier (scrappy@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) wrote:
As of this moment, if Oracle buys Zend, they could effectively kill PHP
... the core engine that PHP is built around is a Zend engine, so if they
were to revoke the license for that, PHP would be dead ... kinda like
MySQL with InnoDB ... now, there was talk at one point time with
replacying that engine with Parrot, so I'm not sure how hard/long it would
take for them to do so if Zend got pulled out from under them ...
Has there been any actual test (ie: court case) of a piece of software
being released under an open source (BSD, GPL, whatever) license and
then the licensor revoking that and stopping everyone from distributing
the code? Personally, I have no idea at all if this is something which
can be done and upheld or not and I'm kind of curious about it. That
would be a very different (and much more difficult for the rest of us)
situation from releasing future versions as closed-source only or just
not releasing new versions.
Actually, based on my limited understanding ... "currently existing
versions" of PHP would be safe, it would be new versions that would have
to rip out the Zend stuff ... I don't believe you can retroactively change
a license, but IANAL ...
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Marc G. Fournier Hub.Org Networking Services (http://www.hub.org)
Email: scrappy@xxxxxxx Yahoo!: yscrappy ICQ: 7615664