Why GPL violations are bad – Gary explains

Read more: http://andauth.co/WCtJZF | The thing about open source software is that it is equally a social contract as well as a legal agreement. That is why companies that break the open source “contract” are immoral and unjust.

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26 thoughts on “Why GPL violations are bad – Gary explains

  1. Does GPL ONLY means that the changes need to be published? What about the rest of the code that relied on it? Like you said. If the Linux Kernel is GPL, doesn't that mean that ALL of Android should be GPL too? Or just the changes that Google made to the kernel? Why is this so confusing?

  2. So they don’t have to publish the changes of android, but have to publish the changes in Linux kernel , am I understanding correctly?

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  4. GPL violations happen alot in China. Kernels often are forked to work on particular hardware on Android devices they make. Huawei does not care about releasing source of forked kernels or drivers. They do not even want you rooting any of their products.

  5. Confusing. Why does an Android app have to modify the Linux kernel? Can a developer write and sell an android app, release the source but stipulate that users of the app have to pay a license fee?

  6. Seems like there is a flaw. When people rewrite the code in order to avoid mixing GPL and the people who wrote the original open source code don't get original code back with whatever updates the person made. That means people are taking the open source code, using it, and not giving anything back to the open source community. There's nothing to stop company's from just taking the open source code and designing something that works exactly the same and then making it closed source. I feel like if they are using open source code and saving money on hiring developers to write the code from scratch they should give code back to whoever they originally got it from.

  7. Sorry, but these strong copyleft licenses are not much better than any proprietary license, and the belief that they enforce software freedom has largely gone alongside Richard Stallman's recent exit from the OSS and Free Software scene. A restriction is a restriction, and to prevent proprietary software companies from making derivative works under their own terms is by no means a way of freeing your software. People contribute to the OSS scene for the good of everyone, out of either a passion for technology, or because they're developing a software subsystem of a proprietary product that they don't mind open sourcing (and in fact doing so likely helps improve that subsystem). I strongly urge lovers of software freedom to use either the MIT or Apache 2.0 license.

  8. GPL is better at saving you money than at making you money. This is what most big companies understand and what the majority of normal people don't. Sometimes this is worth it way more than actually selling and profiting off of a product. GPL projects are community driven and not strictly company driven. Of course usually the biggest players in these communities that develop the GPL project are actual, real, massive, extremely wealthy companies that found out they can save/make money through this particular GPL product. In return they submit changes/contribute to this project making it even bigger, stronger and better. This is why currently open source projects are advancing faster and gaining more ground than proprietary projects. Of course there are certain types of programs that are not really worth making open source but they are specific cases. For the biggest and most widely used projects open source proved to be a more efficient, faster, stable and secure way to develop.

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