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Re: License

 

On 08/09/10 02:55, Harish Narayanan wrote:
On 9/8/10 2:22 AM, Garth N. Wells wrote:


On 07/09/10 17:07, Johan Hake wrote:
On Tuesday September 7 2010 01:12:02 Harish Narayanan wrote:
On 9/7/10 12:27 PM, Anders Logg wrote:
On Tue, Sep 07, 2010 at 08:26:03AM +0530, Harish Narayanan wrote:
On 9/6/10 7:13 PM, Anders Logg wrote:
eA bunch of different licenses are used for various FEniCS
components,
mostly different versions of GPL and LGPL.

I would be practical to clean up among the licenses and maybe even
use
the same license for all components. At least, we should settle on
either GPL or LGPL v3 or any later version for all components. One
immediate benefit is that a common license would simplify packaging
for Debian/Ubuntu since that requires listing all licenses used and
that involves some work (even for DOLFIN alone!).

One implication is the need for changing the DOLFIN license which is
now LGPL v2.1.

An important point to consider is the potential implication of the
GPL
license used in FFC and UFL, which might force GPL on DOLFIN.

I have added a blueprint:

https://blueprints.launchpad.net/fenics/+spec/license

Please comment here and on the blueprint whiteboard.

Are there any plans for a proprietary product built atop the FEniCS
components? (Imagine a fancy GUI frontend or something.) Or posed in
another way, how would the community feel if something like this was
built on FEniCS, and sold by someone else (or one of their own) for
profit? (And not have any of their cool extensions contributed back.)

There are no concrete plans that I know of, but I have had many
questions about the choice of license and possibilities for making
proprietary products on top of FEniCS.

I guess the question is how one feels about this, as therein lies the
difference between LGPL and GPL. And since there are many votes for
LGPL---and it will likely win this little vote---I will voice my support
for GPL. As in, if in the future there exists some cool frontend or
something for FEniCS, I would like such a tool (or its underlying
enhancements) to be freely available for teaching students and such.

The reason I lean towards LGPL is that we probably gets more users


What hasn't been discussed (or maybe I missed it) is the distinction
between L/GPLv2 and L/GPLv3. Can anyone summarise the difference in a
nutshell?

GPL v3 offers the same basic freedoms as GPL v2. Furthermore, GPL v3
clarifies some language to prevent recent shady acts such as the
following from occurring in the future:

   - "Tivoization." This is whena hardware system incorporating Free
Software uses hardware restrictions to prevent users from running
modified versions of the software on that hardware.[1]

   - Crippling DRM. Similar to the above, GPL v3 ensures that you have
the freedom to remove software restrictions crippling the use of programs.

   - The MS-Novell patent protection deal. GPL v3 provides for explicit
patent protection of the users from the program's contributors and
redistributors. As in, someone can't distribute patent-encumbered
software, then turn around and tell you that you're violating their rights.

Further advantages of GPLv3 include better internationalization, gentler
termination, support for p2p distribution, and compatibility with the
Apache license.[2]

LGPL v3 inherits the above from GPL v3. In fact, LGPL v3 is actually GPL
v3 plus an addendum that allows redistribution of linking programs
without providing the source. (This is unlike LGPL v2.1 which is a
complete license on its own.)

GPL 3 also benefits from having been written by expert lawyers so it actually holds together much better as a document. GPL2.1 is actually really badly drafted and has some utter legal nonsense in it.

The downside of GPL3 is that it's incompatible with GPL2.1 and there is a fair bit of GPL software out there which doesn't have the "any later versions" clause attached.

David


Harish

[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tivoization
[2] http://gplv3.fsf.org/rms-why.html

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--
Dr David Ham
Applied Modelling and Computation Group,
Department of Earth Science and Engineering,
Imperial College London,

http://www.imperial.ac.uk/people/david.ham



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