On Sep 1, 2007, at 5:52 PM, Adrian Bunk wrote:The BSD license plainly states: "Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies." Once the grantor (Reyk) releases his code under that license, it must remain. You are free to derive work and redistribute under your license, but the original copyright and license permission remains intact. Many other entities (Microsoft, Apple, Sun, etc) have used BSD code and have no problem understanding this. Why is this so difficult for the Linux brain share to absorb? As a former Linux advocate and current OpenBSD user/developer, I'm appalled that fellow open-source developers would see fit to cavalierly disregard the rights of the original copyright holder. You wield the GPL when it suits you, and trample the courtesies of non-GPL developers just because you [think you] can. As bad as Jiri's offense was, it pales to the impudence displayed by Alan Cox, one of the so-called defenders of free software. Shame on you all. --- Jason Dixon DixonGroup Consulting http://www.dixongroup.net -
| Linus Torvalds | Linux 2.6.21-rc4 |
| Greg Kroah-Hartman | [PATCH 008/196] Chinese: add translation of volatile-considered-harmful.txt |
| Andrew Morton | -mm merge plans for 2.6.23 |
| Stephane Eranian | Re: [PATCH] fix up perfmon to build on -mm |
git: | |
| David Miller | [GIT]: Networking |
| David Miller | Re: [PATCH] pkt_sched: Destroy gen estimators under rtnl_lock(). |
| Gerrit Renker | [PATCH 27/37] dccp: Integration of dynamic feature activation - part 2 (server side) |
| Natalie Protasevich | [BUG] New Kernel Bugs |
| Linus Torvalds | Re: silent semantic changes with reiser4 |
| jim owens | Re: ext4 - getting at birth time (file create time) and getting/setting nanosecond... |
| Alan Cox | Re: impact of 4k sector size on the IO & FS stack |
| Peter Zijlstra | Re: + mm-balance_dirty_pages-reduce-calls-to-global_page_state-to-reduce-c ache-re... |
