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Fedora 42 On 64-bit ARM Might Make It Seamless To Run x86/x86_64 Programs

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  • #21
    Originally posted by edxposed View Post
    How come Fedora's lawyers didn't question the legal risks involved?
    why would there be legal risks?

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    • #22
      Originally posted by Quackdoc View Post

      why would there be legal risks?

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      • #23
        Seems a lot like
        "You can't do this"
        "why not"
        "because I said so"
        "well im just gonna go ahead and do it anyways"
        "ill sue you"
        "no you wont"
        *crickets*

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        • #24
          That was 7 years ago, the patents are expiring shortly and also Intel doesn't have a lot of extra money to be fucking around on lawsuits.

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          • #25
            Originally posted by edxposed View Post
            How come Fedora's lawyers didn't question the legal risks involved?
            Originally posted by spicfoo View Post
            Fedora already includes several emulators and they are under a free and open source license. This is no different from Qemu from a legal standpoint.
            Originally posted by Quackdoc View Post
            why would there be legal risks?
            Fedora also includes several crypto libraries already which do what WolfSSL does, but still WolfSSL was removed from Fedora until cleared by legal review. So what is the difference?

            Originally posted by dralley View Post
            That was 7 years ago, the patents are expiring shortly and also Intel doesn't have a lot of extra money to be fucking around on lawsuits.
            I don't think this is how it works. SCO was bankrupt or nearly bankrupt for most of the time during the SCO v IBM lawsuit. In fact if business is bad then companies tend to become more litigious in my impression.

            And there is no doubt, when Intel created new instruction sets, they also patented methods to efficiently emulate them on other architectures. I don't know anyone who contests this.

            Also most of the crypto patents, especially the notorious Point Compression patent (US patent 6141420) expired years ago. And it is highly unlikely that any were applicable at all.
            Last edited by chithanh; 13 September 2024, 02:57 AM.

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            • #26
              Originally posted by chithanh View Post

              Fedora also includes several crypto libraries already which do what WolfSSL does, but still WolfSSL was removed from Fedora until cleared by legal review. So what is the difference?
              is x86 emulation a crypto library? I know it has some crypto stuff self contained inside of it's self, but I don't know if that would be considered a crypto library via their packaging guidelines.

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              • #27
                Quackdoc
                x86 emulation is not a crypto library, but the argument was:
                Originally posted by spicfoo View Post
                Fedora already includes several emulators and they are under a free and open source license. This is no different from Qemu from a legal standpoint.
                so paraphrased, if QEMU is ok then all other software with the same function is also ok.

                I however pointed out that this is not how WolfSSL was treated in Fedora (and this is what edxposed presumably wanted to say).

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                • #28
                  Originally posted by raystriker View Post
                  This is great. Not many people want to mess around with installing FEX on their distro.
                  Looking forward for other major distros to have it too.

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                  • #29
                    Originally posted by chithanh View Post
                    Quackdoc
                    x86 emulation is not a crypto library, but the argument was:

                    so paraphrased, if QEMU is ok then all other software with the same function is also ok.

                    I however pointed out that this is not how WolfSSL was treated in Fedora (and this is what edxposed presumably wanted to say).
                    I believe the situation with Fedora is "because of how crypto is considered a weapons technology for the purpose of export controls, wolfSSL has to go through the official process for thoroughly checking that it either doesn't do anything more than OpenSSL or that anything more that it does do is on the list of OK things to export".

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                    • #30
                      kinda funny that in the future aarch64 will be the arch that "runs everything", which was the longest time the argument for x86

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