Picking a license
Martin P. Hellwig
martin.hellwig at dcuktec.org
Sun May 9 05:22:47 EDT 2010
On 05/09/10 04:49, Paul Rubin wrote:
<cut>
> As I read it, he is saying that when someone releases free software,
> they have "for all intends and purposes lost control over its use", so
> they "should have made peace with the fact" and surrender gracefully.
> I'm asking why he doesn't think Microsoft has lost control the same way.
Microsoft has indeed lost control of it in the same way, it is just
because we here in the 'western' world spend huge amount of money on
prosecuting and bringing to 'justice' does who, whether for commercial
purposes or otherwise, make a copy of a piece of code. Think about it,
it is not stealing, the original is still there and no further resources
where needed from the original developer.
What I am saying is that all this license crap is only needed because we
are used to a commercial environment where we can repeatedly profit from
the same work already done.
I am not saying that you should not profit, of course you should
otherwise there is no interest in making it in the first place.
What I am saying is that we as developers should encourage pay for work
and not pay for code. This will, as I believe it, keep everything much
more healthy and balanced. At least we can cut all the crap of software
patents and copyrights.
For those who say it can't be done, sure it can, all you have to do is
nothing, it takes effort to enforce policies.
--
mph
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