On Sat, Feb 09, 2002 at 09:15:31PM -0700, Brett Glass wrote:
At 05:44 PM 2/9/2002, J.Brown (Ender/Amigo) wrote:
Sorry, let me clarify that point... the major work that was lost was done by a COMMUNITY project, not one of ID's in-house ones. His point is that as the xGPL forces the release of source code with any binaries, so any valuable work like this won't be lost to the community.
In that case, it seems to me that his remarks are a complete non sequitur. The source code of "community" projects that license their work under the MIT X or BSD license is every bit as publicly available as that of projects that use the GPL.
In fact, the GPL would actually reduce the likelihood of recovering the code from someone's box, because commercial programmers such as myself won't look at it or download it.
But no one really gives a hoot what commercial programmers such as yourself do. Your belief that LGPLed software contains cooties is your problem, not ours. I'm sure there may also be programmers who believe that the BSD license causes Ebola, but I don't foresee /that/ irrational fear influencing the licensing discussion, either.
Incidentally, your arguments about proprietary vs. commercial software would be more compelling if you were capable of keeping the difference between the LGPL and the GPL straight for more than 5 minutes at a time. Very clever smokescreen that is, insisting on arguing about the dangers of a license that's not under consideration.
Steve Langasek postmodern programmer