Sun's Schwartz Attacks GPL 625
jskelly writes "Sun Micro President Jonathan Schwartz
attacked the GPL at the Open Source Business Conference in San Francisco yesterday.Other than the same old arguments (you can't make it proprietary later)
he adds that it imposes on developing nations
"a rather predatory
obligation to disgorge all their IP back to the wealthiest nation in the world" -- but fails to mention that the converse is also true: the wealthiest nation in the world is similarly, under the GPL, forced to "disgorge all its IP back to the developing nations" as well. Duh!"
ahh.. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Want to understand this story? (Score:3, Interesting)
Nothing wrong with hating the GPL... (Score:4, Insightful)
stupid CEO, don't like it? don't use it (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:stupid CEO, don't like it? don't use it (Score:4, Funny)
Re:stupid CEO, don't like it? don't use it (Score:3, Interesting)
I demand compensation thusly: If you use my code, then your code is no less free than mine.
You don't see Schwatz jumping all over the BSD license, because he CAN take anything he wants from that. That is a pure gift. The GPL isn't a gift, it's a license. You can't take from it unless you also let others take from your derived work. (Notice how quickly things are starting to get complicated...and I'm still FAR into over-simplification.
High cost to Depevoling Countries (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:High cost to Depevoling Countries (Score:3, Informative)
Just because JS is poking at various points of the GPL, doesn't me he is poking at Open Source.
Other Open Source Licenses (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:High cost to Depevoling Countries (Score:3, Insightful)
Cheers.
Release src only if publically release binary (Score:3, Informative)
GPL allows one to keep everything private one does for self/company/corporation. It's spelled out in the license. You need only release any source you have done IF you publically release the binary. We use lots of heavily modified GPL in house, but of course we could never give out our hard work for free, to anyone. It would be corporate suicide if we did that. I know we aren't the only large software company doing that. We don't, of course, ever use source code in publically released softwa
Re:Release src only if publically release binary (Score:4, Informative)
Then you are violating the GPL. You can't sell it without distributing it, unless you have them using it on your servers somehow and never sent them any binaries. (i.e. the whole dot-bomb application service provider business model)
Re:Release src only if publically release binary (Score:3, Insightful)
It was my impression that you could sell modified GPL made binaries to customers (with the source) without distributing the source or binary to the general public, or even contributing your modified source back to the original GPL'ed project that you started your project from.
So, from how I understand it, I don;t think that he is violating the GPL.
Re:I don't see how that's possible (Score:5, Informative)
As others have pointed out, the customers receiving the binaries and source are free to redistribute them, and probably cannot be constrained from doing so by any non-disclosure agreement..
Re:Nothing wrong with hating the GPL... (Score:3, Informative)
Nice to hear you're happy with OpenSolaris, but please stop spreading mis-information
Re:Nothing wrong with hating the GPL... (Score:3, Interesting)
I hate to say this, but if you can't see the value in developing software for free, you're probably not a very talented developer.
This may be a misguided conclusion, but I've noticed that brilliant programmers are much more likely to contribute their software to open source, rather than try to develop it commercially.
Re:Nothing wrong with hating the GPL... (Score:3, Insightful)
If you don't think you can make money using the GPL.. then don't use the GPL. I don't understand what you could possibly complain about.
Just because it doesn't work for your needs doesn't make it useless.
Re:Nothing wrong with hating the GPL... (Score:4, Insightful)
Actually, the vast majority of those of us who are (and have been for nearing two decades) fans of the GPL are that way because we don't particularly care about software.
I'm a programmer, but I've only rarely worked for actual software companies. In most non-software companies, you hire programmers to make the things that off-the-shelf software doesn't provide possible.
For such efforts, the GPL is ideal, and I've seen companies benifit both from using established GPL projets as a starting point and from starting new GPL projects.
Re:Nothing wrong with hating the GPL... (Score:3, Insightful)
First, let me address your question as you stated it. You should spend your money developing software and just give it away because it will enhance your reputation. For the respect of your peers, in other words.
But the real answer to your question comes from the twin misconceptions contained in it. I spend my money developing software, but so do IBM, the University of Illinois, Linus Torvalds / OSDL, and thous
Spaceballs? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Spaceballs? (Score:5, Funny)
ESR: Open Source?
MCNEALY: No. The Schwartz.
RMS: The Schwartz?
MCNEALY: Yes. The Schwartz. [He holds his Schwartz ring. His is different than the ring BILL GATES has.]
ESR: But, McNealy, what is this place? What is that you do here?
MCNEALY: Licensing.
ESR: Licensing? What's that? (Keep out of this, RMS!)
MCNEALY: Licensing. Come. I'll show. Walk this way. Take a look. We put the company's copyright on everything. Licensing. Licensing. Where the real money from the software is made. Sun-the-Server, Solaris-the Operating System, UltraSPARC-the Pizza box, Sun-the-dot-in-dot-com. (The analysts loved that one.) Last, but not least, Sun-the-Doll. Me!
[pulls on the string]
DOLL: "May the Schwartz be with you!"
MCNEALY: It ain't the Steve Ballmer Monkeyboy Dancebot, but it sells. May the Schwartz be with you!
Re:Spaceballs? (Score:2)
All about maintining the Status Quo (Score:4, Insightful)
I suppose he would prefer to see the developing nations disgorging their money back to the wealthiest nation in the world's private companies (via licensing costs), thus ensuring this status remains in effect.
Re:All about maintining the Status Quo (Score:5, Insightful)
"IP" is simply ideas with a price tag, which ultimately slows down the speed of human development in return for providing shiny things for those of us with too much already.
But I think Jonanthan Schwartz knows that...
Re:All about maintining the Status Quo (Score:3, Insightful)
1. If an Indonesian lab can get cold fusion working, I'll bet there's an Indonesian company that can produce a working power plant using it. The same is true of any country that has the infrastructure to support serious research.
2. If an Indonesian entity (be it a university lab, a company, whatever) tried to patent something so incredibly useful
Ha! (Score:3, Insightful)
His motto was "All your cheap labor belong to us". Not it's, "All your property belong to us".
What a clown.
Developing nations don't give a fuck about "intellectual property". Just look at the US when it was a young country.
Re:Ha! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:All about maintining the Status Quo (Score:3, Interesting)
Its a not so clever ploy to try and reframe the topic into one of 'nationalism'. Previously we have seen people tell us that Open Source could be used by terrorists. [slashdot.org] and that OS is bad for national security [ohio-state.edu]
As it is obvious to the choir I am preaching to, this is BS. Its an attempt to get people scared. Because the IP that Sun has donest belong to 'the wealthiest nation' or 'a nation' or even the the state or city Sun has
Re:All about maintining the Status Quo (Score:5, Insightful)
The GPL is an equalizer, and puts software back into the realm where it began and where I think it always belonged: cooperative science.
Poor baby. (Score:4, Insightful)
Does anyone see some light at the end of the tunnel for Sun?
It seems to me that they are in several type of trouble with no idea of how to get straight again.
Just my 2 pen'eth Pete
Re:Poor baby. (Score:5, Funny)
Netcraft just confirmed it. It's a train.
Re:Poor baby. (Score:2)
Re:Poor baby. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Poor baby. (Score:5, Insightful)
Notice how the big IP companies always bitch and moan about the GPL? Love it!
I'd say IBM is a pretty big IP company, and it seems to be OK with the GPL. Sure, some IBM products may not use GPLed code because of legal restrictions, but that's different from bitching about it.
CEOs who bitch about external factors are not doing their real job, which is adapting to those factors and/or changing them. CEOs who bitch about not being able to use the fruits of a volunteer effort for their company's gain should be working on finding a way to MAKE money instead.
Bye,
Ori
Re:Poor baby. (Score:3, Insightful)
You can certainly make proprietary software out of GPL code. Your code. If it's your code, you can release it under any license you want! You just can't make proprietary code out of someone else's GPL code. Now why would you think you have any rights to code you didn't write?
Re:Poor baby. (Score:3, Insightful)
If you look at that situation through RIAA-colored glasses, it would be called "theft".
So Mr. Schwartz, if you want complain that you can't "steal" anything from Open Source because of the GPL, remember this well. Even thieves have to eventually pay when they get caught.
Re:Poor baby. (Score:2)
Hmm... (Score:5, Insightful)
Interesting. The world's hottest economy right now is China, which has a poor record when it comes to IP. Other emerging nations, such as India, Indonesia and Brazil also have poor IP records.
No, IP is not needed to pull nations up. It would be nice, but it's clearly not a requirement.
Re:Hmm... (Score:3, Insightful)
Sure, but with the exception of India (which enforces copyright; their issues were with pharmaceutical patents) none of those countries generate significant innovative art or technology. Hong Kong's entertainment industry and Taiwan's tech sector are far more influential than all of mainland China's.
No one's claiming
IP to pull you up (Score:5, Insightful)
I think Schwartz misunderstands. IP isn't used to pull you up. It is used to push others down. Although I can see how he could confuse one with the other.
When you are one of the ones being pushed down, the distinction becomes more obvious.
Re:Hmm... (Score:4, Insightful)
The GPL is an exercise of intelectual property rights, not a subversion of those rights.
BBC (Score:2)
"We're Sun" (Score:5, Funny)
Sun has lead the field for so many years that they really believe the crap they publish in the trade press.
It is sad to see a technology giant succumbing to what could qualify as a form of corporate Parkinson's disease.
Sun's behavior lately (Score:5, Insightful)
Is this any surprise? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Is this any surprise? (Score:2)
If nothing else, Schwartz's ineffective ranting will serve to educate those who would try to be the CherryOSes of this world: If you want to write proprietary programs, don't take your code from GPL'd products.
Personally I don't see why this seems to end up being a surprise to all these companies, like one day they woke up and "Oh my God! The people that wrote that code I downloaded off the web and put on my wire
smart people being stupid (Score:5, Insightful)
Why do these supposedly smart people Balmer, Gates, Lyons, McBride, Schwartz, etc. of the world always sound so stupid when they attept to attack the GPL? They always make it sould like the GPL stipulation to give back your improvements as a nasty surprise at the bottom of the cracker jack box.
Could I not also say:
academia and manufacturing companies that had begun to incorporate propriety software into their products, then...found they had an obligation to pay royalities back to the companies that licences their IP
evil propriety software evil evil...
Re:smart people being stupid (Score:2, Insightful)
Better xample (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:smart people being stupid (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, I don't think they do sound stupid at all. I think, very frequently, they sound pretty smart.
I've seen so many comments on Slashdot and in other places which seem to indicate by their content that the commenter believes greed is limited to only the United States. I mean, I've seen several comments here which point out that the flow of IP under
Christ Schwartz has some balls (Score:5, Insightful)
It always amazes me when they bitch and moan about the way things should be when commercial software manufacturers make up only a small fraction of the software development world. Most people developing software are doing so for internal I.T. departments for internal projects. They benefit the most from Open Source.
But vendors like Sun and Microsoft want us to remain in the dark ages suckling on their poisoned teat when the world can now ween itself of that sour milk and move on to the glory of free beer.
Oh, wait...I'm mixing metaphors...mmm, beer...what was I on about?
Re:Christ Schwartz has some balls (Score:2, Funny)
I think you shot the gift horse in the mouth after you closed the barn door.
Re:Christ Schwartz has some balls (Score:2)
That small fraction of the business world controls 90% of the money. That's why it doesn't surprise me.
Re:Christ Schwartz has some balls (Score:3, Interesting)
Before the end of 2005, Sun will very largely _not_ be a proprietary software vendor. OpenSolaris in Q2, OpenOffice.org is already here, and they're already dropping hints about an OSS database and open sourcing their entire JES stack.
People try so very hard to paint Sun in an evil light, but it just doesn't work.
In one ear and out the other. (Score:4, Interesting)
Wow this guy really needs help from the cluestick.
No worries. (Score:5, Funny)
they're just trying to maintain the fascade (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:they're just trying to maintain the fascade (Score:2)
No, they have destroyed themselves. Sun was always highly overpriced and overrated. During the boom they got away with it - everyone HAD to have Sun machines. Since times have become leaner, they still have this expensive big business image that they can't shake. Their hardware is way cool, but still way to expensive for normal mortals to afford. Their market share has died, but it's not ONLY the adoption of open source products. They hav
Not *all* of their IP. (Score:2, Redundant)
GPL is not always appropriate for all uses (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:GPL is not always appropriate for all uses (Score:2)
It's due diligence. Do the same with any license before you integrate code under it. The "contribute code back" isn't limited to GPL. IIRC, some of the MS shared source licenses have the same restrictions (except it's only back to MS, not the public)
Re:GPL is not always appropriate for all uses (Score:5, Insightful)
The GPL is no different from any other copyright restriction in this regard.
Max
Re:GPL is not always appropriate for all uses (Score:4, Insightful)
I think his point is that some open source projects would be more widely adopted and supported without the GPL
You mean the way the BSDs are so much more widely adopted than Linux?
Re:GPL is not always appropriate for all uses (Score:4, Interesting)
After all, I was just watching a repeat of The Dave Chappelle Show last night on which there was a bit called "PopCopy" about a Kinko's-like copy store and how to be uncooperative to customers. In the bit, he mentions BSD, right? Oh, wait, no...he says Linux. Why? Because Linux is mainstream and it wouldn't have gotten where it is today without the GPL.
I think saying the GPL hurts open source is ridiculous. On a case-by-case basis, you might be able to effectively demonstrate where another license would be better and thankfully, there are other licenses available in those instances. But the GPL is a vital part of the success of Open Source software.
What harms Open Source is Microsoft embedding the BSD TCP/IP stack but how many end users ever heard of BSD? And Apple half-assing their cooperation with Open Source to make OS X. How many end users running OS X ever heard of BSD even though their very OS is based upon it? But the chances they've heard of Linux is much higher. Appple, Microsoft, and the BSD license they've taken advantage of to take other people's work without compensation has arguably harmed Open Source. But, hey, the people who put that stuff out there under the BSD license did that of their own free will and more power to them. If it weren't for that, we might not have a standardized TCP/IP stack today...God knows if Microsoft had to write their own they'd have probably fucked it up entirely.
(imho)
Re:GPL is not always appropriate for all uses (Score:3, Informative)
There isn't anything negative about market share and restrictions that can be said about the GPL that cannot also be said about Sun's products. THAT is what all this bullshit PR is about. Just think how much marke
Re:GPL is not always appropriate for all uses (Score:3, Interesting)
So your employer thinks that they need to take more care to avoid accidentially incorporating GPL licensed code than code with any other type of license?
Manager1: it is especially
Re:GPL is not always appropriate for all uses (Score:3, Informative)
The GPL has been labelled as a "viral license" in some company policies I've seen because it really does open everything up in most cases.
It's important to understand the implications of ANY licence. They're all viral. A proprietary library will also cause problems if it infects your application. It might limit your licencing options, or it might drive the price of your software too high for it to be viable.
I worked with a company once that had a real business need to give out driver source. The drive
Who Cares (Score:2)
GPL is better for poorer nations (Score:2, Insightful)
Contrast that with Microsoft, raking in dollars from all over the world, back to their little stash in the North West US.
Relevance? (Score:2, Interesting)
Asymmetry (Score:5, Interesting)
The owner of the copyright is free to license it however they like. In particular they can do the standard dual-licensing trick that is done by people like sleepycat, with a GPLd version which is free as well as a more liberal one, which you pay for. Other people are not free to do this.
Most code will (initially, anyway) originate in the developed world. People in the developing world are poor, and will therefore very likely use it under the GPL, and therefore contribute changes back to the developed world (and to the developing world of course). Users in the developed world, who are generally richer, can avoid doing this by paying for a liberal version.
This would not happen with a BSD-style license, for instance.
Obrigado (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Obrigado (Score:2)
Opening one's source is an opportunity, not an obligation
While this is an "opportunity", it's also an obligation if you create an aggregated work.
Disingenuous (Score:5, Insightful)
In this case, SUN is seriously misquoting the GPL. Deliberately, I fear. Nothing in the GPL requires general publication -- giving away IP. The only thing required is that you give users source. If there are many users, it amounts to general publication. But a lot of code is _not_ general, but just for one firm. They get source (as they should, having paid for the work), but are very unlikely to publish it generally. The only thing the GPL really attacks is per-seat licencing. Co-incidentally, this is a big part of Sun's revenue stream.
Ignorance of development economics (Score:3, Interesting)
People in developing countries who use GPL have priced-in the potential costs of loss of their IP rights versus the potential savings from using GPL products or advantages to using GPL products.
Of course, in many developing countries, the concept of IP rights may not even exist...which can be part of the reason they are still "developing".
The GPL says... (Score:5, Insightful)
You are not required to accept this License, since you have not signed it. However, nothing else grants you permission to modify or distribute the Program or its derivative works.
Nobody is forcing Mr. Schwartz to make use of GPL software. We in the open source community like the GPL because it's fair. You want to use all that code out there, for free? Share and enjoy. But you have to play by our rules. You don't get to enjoy the benefits of the GPL without also taking on its responsibilities.
That's why Sun (and Microsoft) love the BSD license so much
Death for Sun becomes easy... (Score:2)
Hell I just did it with 2 boxes here in the military establishment I work for. Sun is so schizo about Open Source. The love it one day and hate it the next....
Typical (Score:2, Insightful)
"IP" does not exist. It's not allowed by the US Constitution, and is bizarre in concept anyway: what, you own the part of my brain that knows your ideas? You cannot actually own something that only exists in people's heads, fella. Hand me a song and then we can talk.
The problem is
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Disgorge your purse! (Score:2, Insightful)
It is rather clear that most developing nations won't ever even the field in terms of production capacity - we will never have as many programmmers as well-trainned as the US, for instance. So Free Software makes all sense, as it allows us to divide the efforts among all interested parties. For poor nations the situation is even more dramatic, as they neit
So if the GPL.. (Score:2, Insightful)
What are they doing to help these countries, with their proprietary models? Import employees? Lots of good that'll do their economy. Outsource? Only means more profit (lower wages) flows back to the USofA.
"Use the Schwarz" is getting a whole new meaning. Seriously, go ask the folks in Brazil and Chile where they can stick it.
how much ip is created in developing countries (Score:2, Interesting)
On the other hand, would you rather see this developing country with low budget try spending money to buy enough tech infrastructure to start to compete with the big guys? Ho
That's a better situation... (Score:2)
Sun's fake compassion (Score:2)
Weren't they arguing that Java would be the great equalizer of the classes back in the mid 90s?
This is just more of the same. They're using BS arguments to pretend that they care about the less fortunate, while obviously advancing their own interests.
Do they honestly believe that anyone falls for this?
No surprise (Score:4, Insightful)
Hello, truth? Are you out there? Come back... we miss you.
duh! (Score:2, Redundant)
That's the primary intent of the GPL. That's like complaining that water gets you wet. The intent of the GPL is that companies like SUN can't take my code, make minor changes, and claim proprietary ownership of the result (by only distributing the object code, and deckarubg the source code a trade secret)
Sun's CDL contains some wilfull holes
They are under no such obligation! (Score:4, Insightful)
They're not obliged to release the software if they do use it (e.g. for internal projects).
Since they can get it for free, the amount they receive is probably greater than the cost to them.
They have choice in the matter. As much choice as whether or not to use Solaris. And personally, I think a lot of developing nations are going to be alot happier about giving "IP" away to the richest nations in the world than giving money to the richest nations in the world.
It's on purpose !! (Score:3, Informative)
Wanting stuff for free so you can sell it (Score:5, Interesting)
His crying for the third-world is doubly laughable hogwash since it ignores completely that the GPL works in two directions and in the same way for each. Then it ignores that it is the insanely expensive nature of western software that makes much of our vaunted technology inaccessible to them to begin with.
Finally, as we've done at my company, if you really want to use GPLed code why don't you try purchasing a different license from its developer. They might not be interested, of course, or it might not be possible due to multiple copyright owners, but a number of interesting open source projects do dual-license. It's a nice arrangement: developer gets a nice wad of cash and continues to own their code and work on it and the company gets its product done faster and consequently they get to the market faster.
No Offense To Sun Microsystems... (Score:3, Insightful)
It's still not too late for them to get with the program. Superior hardware and OS? Maybe, but due to marketing, business model, shifted tech sector needs or whatever you want to call it.... It's almost a weekly occurence where I'm hearing about a couple of $400 Debian boxes replacing tens of thousands of dollars of old Sun hardware, not the other way around...
I love Sun... (Score:4, Funny)
But DAMMMIT!!! They have got to start keeping these people on mahogany row quiet.
That seems to be Sun's biggest problem at the moment. Allowing these people to just shoot from the hip in public.
It really turns a lot of people in the open source community away from what is actually a very open source friendly vendor.
Bad summary! (Score:4, Insightful)
This is incorrect. Of course you can make your GPL'd code proprietary if you decide to retain copyright ownership of your IP. You may and can release your code as GPL, and later release it as closed-source, proprietary work.
Of course, you can't license someone else's IP. That's a different ball of wax. Exactly like I can't license Michael Jackson's Thriller album to EMI.
GPL imposes on developing nations "a rather predatory obligation to disgorge all their IP back to the wealthiest nation in the world"
Again, this is incorrect to the point where it's either a gross misquote, or complete lack of understanding of IP.
The GPL does not in any way coerce any non-GPL license into the GPL. There may be financial benefits to licensing a product under the GPL license. On the flip side, there may be financial benefits to not license a product under the GPL. There is absolutely no obligation, preditorially or otherwise, to license your own IP under the GPL. The only exception is if you've agreed to a contract which stipulates that you must release your work under the GPL - and clearly agreeing to such a contract implies that there is some advantage to you to do so.
So in a nutshell, this is not an issue. And the fact that no cases were described suggests that this is just can't happen.
Re:Bad summary! (Score:3, Insightful)
Dear Mr. Schwartz, (Score:3, Insightful)
Zack
Anti-GPL is Anti-Free-Market (Score:4, Insightful)
The Free Market is all about people freely setting whatever price they want, and taking their chances on the outcome.
No-one is forced to use the GPL. Under the GPL, contributors voluntarily set the price of their contribution (at "free") and take their chance freely on somehow making a living. So what's the problem?
If Third-World nations, or individuals decide to take their chance, it's probably because they figure the alternatives don't work to their advantage. They may be right, they may be wrong, but it's really up to them to make the call.
Some you win, some you lose .... so why does Sun sing the blues?
Please stop giving credit to the wrong movement. (Score:5, Informative)
The ZDNet article headline reads "Sun criticizes popular open-source license". Calling the GNU General Public License an "open-source" license is ahistorical and gives credit to the wrong movement, hiding the name of the real author of the license and the name of the movement for which the license was written.
By calling the GPL an "open source" license, the open source movement is allowed to grab credit for a trivial bit of work: constructing a set of rules which allow the GPL to be given the Open Source Initiative's imprimateur. This is nothing compared to writing the GPL and starting the free software movement.
The GPL was written many years before the OSI started. Nobody who would form the OSI wrote the GPL. The GPL was written by the FSF (most notably, RMS, who gets far too little credit for his work here on Slashdot). The OSI has dismissed software freedom [gnu.org] for a message which does not preserve user's software freedoms (for instance, the open source definition does not guarantee a user's privacy--the OSI approved the early revisions of the Apple Public Source License which required publication and notification of a central authority upon changing APSL-covered software in most instances. The FSF did not give its imprimateur to the APSL v1.x revisions, holding out until Apple changed the license in what would become the v2.x revisions.).
Let's give credit where credit is due. I think just as RMS tells us (repeatedly [gnu.org]) that GCC is a free software program, not an open source program [com.com] because it misstates the authorship and reason why the program was written (RMS was the initial author of GCC which he wrote to provide software freedom for GNU), we ought to give the author and intentions of the GPL proper mention by calling it a free software license. That cannot be done by calling it an open source license.
Commercial software (Score:3, Funny)
Duh (Score:4, Insightful)
Thats the whole *POINT*. People who license their work under GPL specifically intend for this, and if they refuse to permit their work to be used in a proprietary work, they have every right to make the restriction. Its called share and share alike.
Why should any corp have a right to take someone else work, that they obtained for free, and use it in their proprietary for-profit product, against that persons will? You dont have that right for code developed by anyone else thats *NOT* open source, you (usually) dont even get to *see* the source, let alone even get to consider including it in your own project. GPL isnt taking anything away, its granting lots of rights that you wouldnt otherwise have, but its specifically *not* granting the right to use GPL'd code in a project, and then not give the same rights to others that the GPL gave you. Its 100% fair, which I suppose I can understand how software corps dont like that - they like it when they can have an unfair advantage.
Re:hmmmm... (Score:2)
The GPL has only one Goal. to insure software remains free from control. Like the Bitkeeper move. If it isn't Free you can't trust it to be around and updated tomorrow.
No company lasts forever, but GPL'ed software can.
Re:hmmmm... (Score:2, Insightful)
Basically, he's making a convoluted argument that GPL is infact far too capitalist to work in today's hugs-and-kisses technology industry. It's probably one of the more insane accusations cast against the GPL, if only because it directly contradict