Originally posted by Marc Driftmeyer
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Apple Originally Tried To Give GPL'ed LLVM To GCC
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That is what I mean by distributed copyright, all contributors retain the copyright to their contribution and provides access to their contribution through the license. As opposed to one entity having copyright to everything. Samba is also like that, and OpenWrt and KDE and many other successful open projects.
I imagine a lot of developers feel that way, so if you are going to contribute to something, you would favor the project that is community owned.
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Originally posted by who_me View Post"Apple was trying to do the right thing" ummm so by Michael's logic, LLVM should have been integrated into GCC to be kept under the GPL license... What the actual f... ?! Are you serious?
There was nobody stopping Apple to license LLVM under the GPL if they wanted it, integrated into GCC or not.
Rising up shit storms is what passes for journalism these days.
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Originally posted by prodigy_ View PostOh, so Apple wanted to contribute to a GPL open source project without having an ulterior motive? Yeah, right. And Steve Jobs real name was Santa Claus.
Originally posted by Del_ View PostSure. I am no lawyer, but I do have colleagues that are which help me out on these issues. My understanding is that you need to have copyright in order to enforce the license, and this is invested in copyright law. In short, if you don't have copyright to the code, then no harm has been done to your property. Moreover, I believe it suffices to have copyright only to parts of the code, since those parts are also covered by the law, and is infringed. Hence, enforcing the license should be possible for anybody holding copyright to any of the code. It is important to note that GPL heavily relies on, and is ingeniously taking advantage of, copyright law.
Originally posted by zanny View PostI know that as a software developer I won't contribute to projects with reassignment, or at least I'm not interested in doing so. Because I don't want someone relicensing my work because I gave them the right to to a license I don't agree with.
I imagine a lot of developers feel that way, so if you are going to contribute to something, you would favor the project that is community owned.
I believe lots of developers have the same bias in favor of the FSF as I have.
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Originally posted by prodigy_ View PostOh, so Apple wanted to contribute to a GPL open source project without having an ulterior motive? Yeah, right. And Steve Jobs real name was Santa Claus.
The community also benefits from having their work. This is one of the prime motivators of companies to release source code. That, and getting free programmers to work on their software.
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Originally posted by JX8p View PostRed Hat, Novell, Cygnus, basically just list ALL corporate contributors to FOSS.
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Originally posted by prodigy_ View PostWhile ALL corporations are evil, there's more than one shade of black. Please don't even try to compare Red Hat or Novell with Apple. The first is a clever geek lacking moral integrity. The second is a grumpy old man dreaming of the days of glory long since passed. And the third is a sadistic maniac ever on lookout for new victims.
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Originally posted by erendorn View PostBecause all corporations are single man/single team, and their purpose is always to screw the "community" first and foremost.Last edited by Del_; 27 January 2014, 09:29 AM.
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