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Re: Licensing question about the GPL
From: |
Stefaan A Eeckels |
Subject: |
Re: Licensing question about the GPL |
Date: |
Tue, 2 Aug 2005 10:33:29 +0200 |
On Mon, 01 Aug 2005 18:51:06 -0400
Steve <SteveSpamTrap@yahoo.com> wrote:
> I've heard this used as a counterargument against the claim that GPL is
> a "viral" license (I don't use that term in a derogatory way, I thought
> that was the whole point to the GPL!). However, the argument that I've
> heard states a copyright owner of GPL'ed software is able to
> dual-license that software, period. Is that really the case, universally?
The author/copyright owner can license the work as they please.
> What about if your software is GPL'ed because it includes other GPL'ed
> software? It seems to me that in such a situation, you would be
> required to obtain alternate-licensing from that other software's
> copyright owner... who in turn would have to first obtain an alternate
> license for any GPL code that THEY had used, an so forth.
That is correct. Once there are multiple copyrights involved, the
permission of all the copyright holders is required.
> It doesn't seem logical to me that I could take the GCC codebase, make some
> changes, call it NCC ("New Compiler Collection"), and then dual-license
> it for proprietary use without first getting permission from Stallman or
> the FSF or whoever.
You are not the copyright owner of GCC, so the only way you can prepare
a derivative NCC from GCC is by accepting the GPL, meaning you have to
license NCC under the GPL.
> Is my understanding incorrect, and one CAN dual-license any GPL'ed work
> (even a derived work)... or is it rather the case that you can only
> dual-license a GPL'ed work if you are the ORIGINAL copyright owner of
> all GPL'ed components (or have their permission)?
The latter is the case.
--
Stefaan
--
As complexity rises, precise statements lose meaning,
and meaningful statements lose precision. -- Lotfi Zadeh