posting fixes, license, and the u-area bug
Richard Foulk
richard at pegasus.com
Sat Mar 2 02:59:48 AEST 1991
>> Wrong. ISC can go to AT&T and say "Please give us permission to
>> violate the licensing agreement and post this fix."...
>
>#ifndef reality
>
>Wait...OK, I get it! Marty should just spend a little of her copious free
>time, or perhaps do it on her lunch hour...just drop by the local AT&T
>office and have a friendly chat, say "By the way, we've got this little
>problem, so would you folks mind if we posted, oh, say a couple hundred Kb
>of the code we license from you?" I'm sure AT&T won't mind if we say
>"pretty please".
Given the egregiousness of the bug in question it would seem quite
reasonable for someone at ISC to make such an effort.
To assume that AT&T wouldn't allow the public distribution of otherwise
useless binaries or parts of binaries seems a little incredible. I'm
not convinced that ISC's existing license with AT&T specifically
disallows this, or that they wouldn't allow it after a simple phone
call.
There may be other over-riding reasons why posting fixes to the net is
not workable -- but, please don't try to advance your argument by piling
it high with ridiculous BS like this.
One begins to wonder if ISC's motto isn't something like:
`Well, it probably can't be done ... and I'm too busy to check'
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