On Fri, 29 Jun 2007 00:00:27 +0200 Rene Herman <rene.herman@gmail.com> wrote:The answer is "NO!!!!" Public domain also means "I don't have to give you the source". If its merged with the kernel the resulting work is GPL anyway Indeed if its public domain you may have almost no rights at all depending what you were given. Once you get the source code you can do stuff but I don't have to give you that. If its public domain I can find security holes in it, and refuse to provide the fixed module in source form even. (And public domain is a pretty 'brave' choice of licence as in many countries it does not imply any of the no warranty stuf the GPL does). So essentially, if its public domain and you put a copy in the kernel GPL the kernel copy. It doesn't mean the PD version ceased to be PD. If you want to keep it PD then also ask that anyone contributing to the GPL version also sends you a PD version of any changes. (They may not but then right now they dont have to anyway) Alan -
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