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Rather than get into a somewhat off-topic discussion of the intricacies of software licenses, I'd just refer folks to Ira V. Heffan, Copyleft: Licensing Collabrative Works in the Digital Age, 49 Stanford L. Rev. 1487 (1997). A very excellent article analyzing the basis for enforceability of the GPL. It should be noted that the article was "peer" reviewed by Stallman. It is a common misconception that licensing is purely copyright driven and that contract law principles do not apply. -Warren Agin ----- Original Message ----- From: <dsr at tao.merseine.nu> To: <discuss at blu.org> Sent: Monday, June 02, 2003 11:14 AM Subject: Re: WASTE and the GPL, plus a patch for the code > On Mon, Jun 02, 2003 at 09:58:45AM -0400, Derek Martin wrote: > > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > > Hash: SHA1 > > > > On Mon, Jun 02, 2003 at 09:32:19AM -0400, Robert L Krawitz wrote: > > > The GPL is not a contract. It's a conditional grant of additional > > > rights that would otherwise not be granted under copyright (so states > > > the FSF). As it notes, you're not required to accept the GPL, but in > > > that case you only have the normal rights that come with copyright -- > > > in particular, no right to distribute. > > > > How is that not a contract? You are granted something, namely rights > > to distribute source code, in exchange for something, namely your > > agreement to abide by the terms of the license agreement. That sounds > > like a contract to me... In the case that you do not agree to the > > terms of the license (contract), the rights you have are those you > > would have in the absence of the contract, just as is the case with > > any proposed contractual agreement. If you accept the terms, you are > > bound by the contract. If you don't, statutory law applies. > > It's not a contract because it isn't governed by contract law, it's > governed by copyright law. > > Copyright comes into effect automatically for any creative work. Then, > the creator can assign various rights to anyone they please, under > whatever terms they please. The GPL is a standardized way of assigning > rights. > > A contract must be entered into voluntarily by two or more parties; it > must be negotiable on both sides; both sides need to be aware that they > are entering a contract. > > The creator of a work initially owns all the rights to it, as governed > by copyright law. They can announce that the work is available under the > terms of the GPL, and no contract has occurred. A random person can use > the work under the terms of the GPL, and still no contract has occurred. > The creator can negotiate with FooCorp to give certain rights to > FooCorp, and that would be a contract -- between the creator and > FooCorp. No contract exists with the random public. > > -dsr- > > -- > Network engineer / pre-sales engineer available in the Boston area. > http://tao.merseine.nu/~dsr > _______________________________________________ > Discuss mailing list > Discuss at blu.org > http://www.blu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss >
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