"Open" Software Foundation: GNU
Ian Dall
idall at augean.OZ
Tue Jun 14 17:04:02 AEST 1988
In article <1144 at mcgill-vision.UUCP> mouse at mcgill-vision.UUCP (der Mouse) writes:
->In article <5910001 at hplsla.HP.COM>, jima at hplsla.HP.COM ( Jim Adcock) writes:
->
->> Well, as long as we're complaining about naming conventions, how
->> about complaining about "Free Software Foundation" ???
->However, gcc appears to be different. I don't have the gcc license on
->hand at the moment, but if it's as similar to the emacs license as I
->expect, a good case could be made that anything compiled with gcc (or
->*certainly* anything linked with the gcc-distribution library routines)
->cannot be distributed for-profit or otherwise contrary to Richard's
->ideals as embodied in the license.
Is the gcc licence agreement more restrictive than commercial (say AT&T
for example) compiler licences. On my system all the include files
have AT&T Copyright notices on them. My (binary only) licence doesn't
say anything about exemptions for libraries or include files. Arguably
giving/selling a program compiled on my system is redistributing stuff
that my licence forbids. It would have major ramifications for the
whole industry if anyone tried to enforce such an interpretation.
--
Ian Dall "In any argument there will be people on your
side who you wish were on the other side."
idall at augean.oz
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