Stefan Richter wrote:No, but the GPL does. Yes, it does. If you contribute to a GPL project, you *explicitly* agree to exactly this. Anything you submit may be pieced together, changed, made public, processed, and used for purposes other than you intended. No, but that all the submissions were made under the GPL, whose explicit purpose is to allow information to be changed, processed, and reused for other purposes does. If you don't want your submissions to be in the public record for all eternity to be used for any lawful purpose, don't make them to a GPL project. You have no right whatsoever to look at how one person chooses to use them and say "I didn't agree to that". Yes, you did. You gave up the right to approve or reject each use when you made the submission. If you don't like it, submit under some other license. DS --
| Sunil Naidu | Re: Linux 2.6.20-rc6 |
| david | Re: Dual-Licensing Linux Kernel with GPL V2 and GPL V3 |
| Jan Engelhardt | intel iommu (Re: -mm merge plans for 2.6.23) |
| Linus Torvalds | Re: init's children list is long and slows reaping children. |
| David Miller | Re: [GIT]: Networking |
| Jarek Poplawski | [PATCH] pkt_sched: Destroy gen estimators under rtnl_lock(). |
| Gerrit Renker | [PATCH 27/37] dccp: Integration of dynamic feature activation - part 2 (server side) |
| Andrew Morton | Re: [BUG] New Kernel Bugs |
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