Proprietary Linux???
Lar Kaufman
lark at world.std.com
Wed Aug 9 09:22:26 EDT 1995
> This press release release about "Red Hat" makes it seem like there is
> a proprietary Linux that can not be redistributed at no charge. I
> thought that the license conditions for using Linux code included
> making any derivative works freely redistributable.
There are packages available that are not (as a package) freely redistributable.
Someone has a package that includes Motif, which is licensed by the OSF, and
Caldera, for example, includes Visix Looking Glass, which is a proprietary
product. These, of course, are not "derivative works" of Linux, but they
do constitute a part of a bundled package. I'll skip going into a detailed
discussion of what constitutes a derivative work legally, since it isn't
necessary for a work to be derivative to bundle it in a Linux package.
-lar
Lar Kaufman co-author, "Running Linux"
Concord, Massachusetts "Dogs bark, but the
1-508-371-1563 caravan rolls on."
lark at walden.com BUSL '98 - Andre Gide
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