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Posts: 316 | Thanked: 150 times | Joined on May 2006
#51
The GPL is about sharing what the authors want to be shared. It does not in any way encourage or legitimise the use of pirated code. As the SCO case showed, GPL people take copyright and attribution more seriously than most closed software manufacturers.
 
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Posts: 445 | Thanked: 572 times | Joined on Oct 2009 @ Oxford
#52
Originally Posted by jaark View Post
The GPL is about sharing what the authors want to be shared.
It's not quite that straightforward. The free software movement is founded on a belief that software should be free, not that it should be free if authors want it to be. The GPL is a clever legal hack to encourage this to be increasingly the case whilst working within the law as it exists. The author(s) of the GPL would be quite happy if software freedom was mandated by law for all software and the GPL became redundant.
 

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Posts: 158 | Thanked: 67 times | Joined on Jan 2008
#53
Here's something about the Free Software Foundations stand on sharing:

The Free Software Foundation is concerned with the freedom to copy and change software; music is outside our scope. But there is a partial similarity in the ethical issues of copying software and copying recordings of music. [...]

No matter what sort of published information is being shared, we urge people to reject the assumption that some person or company has a natural right to prohibit sharing and dictate exactly how the public can use it.
On the other hand, here's an explanation of how the abolishment of copyright would hurt Free software.
 
Posts: 3,319 | Thanked: 5,610 times | Joined on Aug 2008 @ Finland
#54
Originally Posted by jaark View Post
That is exactly the way it should be - pay for quality, not cheap tat fart apps.
The idea is sound, but on the ecosystem level, it can be dangerous. With an all-proprietary/commercial solution, this is not a problem - a helathy profit margin is everybody's interest. Here, however, the table turns. Free software doesn't care about other people's profit margin. Make higher quality apps, you say ? It's not that easy - resources (time and money) are limited and there is no inherent guarantee that a classic-model oriented developer will be able to keep up with a successful large OSS projects that has hundreds of contributors. In those terms, the higher pressure on commercial developers is a double edged sword with regard to the end users - you might get higher quality apps, but at the same time that might be the cause why a commercial project folds.
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Posts: 11,700 | Thanked: 10,045 times | Joined on Jun 2006 @ North Texas, USA
#55
Man, that slippery slope just shows up everywhere...
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