Rick Campbell (rick@campbellcentral.org)
Thu, 08 Oct 1998 22:25:49 -0400
Date: Thu, 8 Oct 1998 20:25:25 -0400
From: Richard Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
Public Domain status denotes more freedom than GPL. It allows all of
the freedom of GPL and in addition, it allows the freedom of making
proprietary modifications.
Public domain gives person P the ability to make modified versions and
give users no freedom in using them. The result is that people in
general have less freedom.
Your presentation confuses two different pieces of software.
It is only the derivative work which has less freedom associated with
it. It remains the case that the person releasing their software to
the Public Domain has given the users of the software that is released
into the Public Domain more freedom to do as they will with that
software.
By releasing into the Public Domain, the author gives up the power to
control other people's activities and allows them to make different,
derived, software which might not have the same level of freedom.
However, such activities do not detract from the freedom that remains
associated with the software that was released into the Public Domain
-- freedom that is taken away by the GPL.
And while some derivative works may be proprietary, it's not uncommon
for other derivations to remain in the Public Domain. CMU Common Lisp
is an example that comes to mind. Whether or not Lucid, Allegro, or
any other proprietary system ever made use of any CMU Common Lisp code
has not detracted from the code released into the Public Domain. This
code continues to be maintained, enhanced, ported to new platforms,
etc.
Rick
The following archive was created by hippie-mail 7.98617-22 on Sat Apr 10 1999 - 01:15:21