From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Return-Path: Received: (majordomo@vger.kernel.org) by vger.kernel.org via listexpand id S264495AbTLLFjP (ORCPT ); Fri, 12 Dec 2003 00:39:15 -0500 Received: (majordomo@vger.kernel.org) by vger.kernel.org id S264497AbTLLFjP (ORCPT ); Fri, 12 Dec 2003 00:39:15 -0500 Received: from dsl092-053-140.phl1.dsl.speakeasy.net ([66.92.53.140]:24510 "EHLO grelber.thyrsus.com") by vger.kernel.org with ESMTP id S264495AbTLLFjK (ORCPT ); Fri, 12 Dec 2003 00:39:10 -0500 From: Rob Landley Reply-To: rob@landley.net To: Andre Hedrick Subject: Re: Linux GPL and binary module exception clause? Date: Thu, 11 Dec 2003 23:39:41 -0600 User-Agent: KMail/1.5 Cc: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org References: In-Reply-To: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Content-Disposition: inline Message-Id: <200312112339.41398.rob@landley.net> Sender: linux-kernel-owner@vger.kernel.org X-Mailing-List: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org On Thursday 11 December 2003 16:42, Andre Hedrick wrote: > Rob, > > > The fact you personally were off in a corner talking about little green > > men from mars is remarkably irrelevant to what I wrote to Hua Zhong (who > > I'm fairly certain is not you. His english is better.) > > Gee, I love the insults. I seriously doubt you have ever paid a lawyer > to even have the knowledge to allow you to pump out the bovine piles you > are spraying in the air. I've noticed that you love insults, yes. I believe you've finally found a statement that we can both agree on. > Correct, I am not a lawyer, and you admit you are not one. Two. Wow. Progress. > I have paid lawyers for advice and some damn good ones. > > Can you say the same? I have paid lawyers for advice. I have been paid BY lawyers. I have hung out socially with lawyers. I have studied law for years, although not with the aim of acquiring credentials. Here's a week-long series on intellectual property I wrote for The Motley Fool a few years ago. It was reviewed by TMF's legal department, and we went back and forth on a couple minor things before it got published. http://www.fool.com/portfolios/rulemaker/2000/rulemaker000501.htm http://www.fool.com/portfolios/rulemaker/2000/rulemaker000502.htm http://www.fool.com/portfolios/rulemaker/2000/rulemaker000503.htm http://www.fool.com/portfolios/rulemaker/2000/rulemaker000504.htm http://www.fool.com/portfolios/rulemaker/2000/rulemaker000505.htm I've since spotted a couple more minor points that crept past the lawyers who reviewed it. I have learned since then. I learned doing it: I still have some of the literature I picked up visiting the PTO in washington DC doing research for that series. And I learned a lot years before doing it. That's just one example that's still online. I have been paid to explain the standard community interpretation of the GPL by at least three different companies' lawyers now. (I started studying the GPL and LGPL specifically in 1996, which is really what got me into this whole hobby...) A few years ago I had some fairly extensive email discussions with Richard Stallman about copyright and the GPL (even driving to boston to interview him in person once). I've had considerably more extensive discussions with Eric Raymond (whose wife is a lawyer, and who as president of OSI has been asked to review licenses by companies like Apple and IBM...) Heck, Eric and Cathy are _friends_ of mine. Try "dig www.landley.net" and "dig www.thyrsus.com": I'm still borrowing space on the machine in Eric's basement because I've been too lazy to arrange a hosting box here in Texas. (It's on my to-do list...) I'm mentioned in the introduction of Eric's new book because I went to Pennsylvania and crashed on his couch for a month to edit the thing. (http://www.catb.org/~esr/writings/taoup/html/pr01s06.html paragraph 2. The "walkthrough" in 0.2 and 0.3 of the revision history was _ME_.) I'm the one who arranged to have a panel at Penguicon on intellectual property issues with a real lawyer (Cathy) explaining what the various open source licenses mean to attendees (See http://penguicon.sourceforge.net/programming.shtml sunday, 10 am, north belle). This year's Penguicon will probably have another one, although I'm much less involved... And what I've learned from ALL of that (and far more that's not worth listing here) is that there's a reason it's called a legal OPINION, and what you generally say isn't "you're wrong" but "I disagree, and here's why". Judges give rulings, not lawyers. (And judges' rulings get overturned, don't apply to a given case, vary by jurisdiction, etc...) Lawyers no more universally agree on interpretations of the law then techies agree on kernel optimizations. And open source licensing (as a subset of intellectual property) is every bit as much a specialty area of the law as virtual memory page replacement strategies (a subset of kernel development) is a specialty area of programming. (Most lawyers don't really know much about it at all, they just know where to look it up. Hence a couple lawyers asking me what the community thinks the GPL means. Obviously they don't take my opinion as gospel: they go and read the thing themselves, and the law, and as much relevant case law as they can find (which ain't much), and then we have a back and forth...) I don't know much about estate planning, tax law, insurance law, or civil administrative procedure. I keep forgetting what latin terms like "res judicata" mean (god bless Google), and I had to look up "barratry" at the start of the SCO thing. But yes, I consider myself competently informed about my little niche. These days, with resources like http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/ out there, it's not nearly as hard to be up to speed on this as it used to be. (You used to have to go to the LIBRARY. And get out BOOKS. And send money to Nolo Press every time they got sued. Uphill. Both ways.) > Can you say the same? Why would I want to? I've seen experts in this area. Eben Moglen (http://emoglen.law.columbia.edu/) and Lawrence Lessig (http://www.lessig.org/blog/) come to mind. I am not an expert here. I am an educated layman. I read things like "Legal battles that shaped the computer industry" (by Lawrence D. Graham, http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/1567201784/026-4037783-2541254 ) for fun. Yes, I am weird. You obviously aren't even an educated layman if you think that simply having spoken to a lawyer means that legalness somehow rubbed off on you and gave you an aura of absolute truth. Every time I talk to a lawyer, the concept of absolute truth in law gets farther and farther away... Feel free to take that as a suggestion. Rob