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* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
       [not found] ` <ujV3.1uP.13@gated-at.bofh.it>
@ 2003-09-10 21:52   ` Pascal Schmidt
  2003-09-10 22:26     ` David Schwartz
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: Pascal Schmidt @ 2003-09-10 21:52 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Schwartz; +Cc: linux-kernel

On Wed, 10 Sep 2003 22:40:14 +0200, you wrote in linux.kernel:

> 	However, Richard Stallman does not agree with this view. It's his
> view that if the authors chose to give you the code, you can use it any
> way you want to, regardless of how the authors feel about that type of
> usage. This is why he created the GPL.

Use in any way you want to is the BSD license, not the GPL. The GPL
does restrict what you're allowed to do in order to keep the source
free...

-- 
Ciao,
Pascal

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* RE: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-10 21:52   ` People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model] Pascal Schmidt
@ 2003-09-10 22:26     ` David Schwartz
  2003-09-10 22:34       ` Pascal Schmidt
  2003-09-12 21:04       ` Timothy Miller
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: David Schwartz @ 2003-09-10 22:26 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Pascal Schmidt; +Cc: linux-kernel


> On Wed, 10 Sep 2003 22:40:14 +0200, you wrote in linux.kernel:

> > However, Richard Stallman does not agree with this view. It's his
> > view that if the authors chose to give you the code, you can use it any
> > way you want to, regardless of how the authors feel about that type of
> > usage. This is why he created the GPL.

> Use in any way you want to is the BSD license, not the GPL.

	Please show me one restriction on *use* in the GPL.

"Activities other than copying, distribution and modification are not
covered by this License; they are outside its scope.  The act of
running the Program is not restricted, and the output from the Program
is covered only if its contents constitute a work based on the
Program (independent of having been made by running the Program).
Whether that is true depends on what the Program does."

	Licenses that place restrictions on usage are *not* open source licenses.

> The GPL
> does restrict what you're allowed to do in order to keep the source
> free...

	Yes, it restricts your ability to distribute and your ability to create
derived works if and only if you distribute those derived works. It places
no restrictions whatsoever on use. And since it requires distributors to
place no restrictions not in the GPL, distributors cannot place *any*
restrictions on usage either.

	DS



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* RE: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-10 22:26     ` David Schwartz
@ 2003-09-10 22:34       ` Pascal Schmidt
  2003-09-11  1:35         ` David Schwartz
                           ` (2 more replies)
  2003-09-12 21:04       ` Timothy Miller
  1 sibling, 3 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Pascal Schmidt @ 2003-09-10 22:34 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Schwartz; +Cc: linux-kernel

On Wed, 10 Sep 2003, David Schwartz wrote:

> Please show me one restriction on *use* in the GPL.

Well, you may not *use* GPL'd code to produce a derived work and
distribute it in binary form only. Use of the code, not use of
the product, sure.

-- 
Ciao,
Pascal


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* RE: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-10 22:34       ` Pascal Schmidt
@ 2003-09-11  1:35         ` David Schwartz
  2003-09-11 13:30           ` Eric W. Biederman
                             ` (2 more replies)
  2003-09-11  1:39         ` David Schwartz
  2003-09-13 17:11         ` Andre Hedrick
  2 siblings, 3 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: David Schwartz @ 2003-09-11  1:35 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Pascal Schmidt; +Cc: linux-kernel


> On Wed, 10 Sep 2003, David Schwartz wrote:

> > Please show me one restriction on *use* in the GPL.

> Well, you may not *use* GPL'd code to produce a derived work and
> distribute it in binary form only.

	That is a restriction on distribution, not use. You may use GPL'd code to
produce a derived work and you may use that derived work. The only
restrictions kick in when and if you distribute that derived work.

> Use of the code, not use of
> the product, sure.

	The GPL puts no restrictions on use. The GPL_ONLY stuff does.

	It's really this simple: The GPL says you can use the code for whatever you
want. It also says that if you want to distribute the GPL'd work or works
based on the GPL'd work, you may not impose any restrictions other than
those imposed by the GPL. It very specifically prohibits restrictions on
mere use or upon the mere creation of derived works. All of its restrictions
kick in on distribution.

	The GPL_ONLY stuff is an attempt to restrict use. There is nothing
inherently wrong with attempts to restrict use. One could argue that the
root permission check on 'umount' is a restriction on use. Surely the GPL
doesn't mean you can't have any usage restrictions at all.

	What it does mean is that such usage restrictions *cannot* be licensing
restrictions. In other words, it cannot be a license violation to remove
them or circumvent them. So long as nobody tries to claim the GPL_ONLY is a
license enforcement technique, there is no dispute.

	However, some people seem to be arguing that the GPL_ONLY symbols are in
fact a license enforcement technique. If that's true, then when they
distribute their code, they are putting additional restrictions not in the
GPL on it. That is a GPL violation.

	Other people who contributed to the Linux kernel relied upon the GPL
license to ensure that their code, and works derived from it, would be
available *without* use restrictions. Nobody has the right to turn around
and impose usage restrictions on the Linux kernel source code.

	The GPL prohibits the imposition of any licensing requirements other than
those contained in the GPL itself, all of which kick in only upon
distribution. It's really that simple. Anyone who distributes the Linux
kernel with a licensing restriction that kicks in on mere use is violating
the GPL.

	DS



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* RE: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-10 22:34       ` Pascal Schmidt
  2003-09-11  1:35         ` David Schwartz
@ 2003-09-11  1:39         ` David Schwartz
  2003-09-13 17:11         ` Andre Hedrick
  2 siblings, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: David Schwartz @ 2003-09-11  1:39 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Pascal Schmidt; +Cc: linux-kernel


> On Wed, 10 Sep 2003, David Schwartz wrote:

> > Please show me one restriction on *use* in the GPL.

> Well, you may not *use* GPL'd code to produce a derived work and
> distribute it in binary form only. Use of the code, not use of
> the product, sure.

	Sure, and you may not *use* GPL'd code to produce a derived work and bring
a firearm into a court of law. I asked for a restriction on *use*, not a
restriction on use and something else.

	DS



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-11  1:35         ` David Schwartz
@ 2003-09-11 13:30           ` Eric W. Biederman
  2003-09-11 18:39             ` David Schwartz
  2003-09-13 17:34             ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-09-11 14:36           ` Alan Cox
  2003-09-12 20:58           ` Timothy Miller
  2 siblings, 2 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Eric W. Biederman @ 2003-09-11 13:30 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Schwartz; +Cc: Pascal Schmidt, linux-kernel

"David Schwartz" <davids@webmaster.com> writes:

> 	The GPL_ONLY stuff is an attempt to restrict use. There is nothing
> inherently wrong with attempts to restrict use. One could argue that the
> root permission check on 'umount' is a restriction on use. Surely the GPL
> doesn't mean you can't have any usage restrictions at all.

No the GPL_ONLY stuff is an attempt to document that there is no conceivable
way that using a given symbol does not create a derived work.  

If you use an unmodified kernel it is only a one liner to ensure it does
not complain about your code.  So this only shows up as a real
impediment when code that uses the symbol is distributed.

Beyond which copying code into the kernel is when this is checked so this is
a valid place to check things.  There is a strong tying between using
programs and copying them into memory.  And that copying is the
justification for most usage restrictions even in commercial software.

The code is also quite a small nit that really should not affect
anything.

Eric

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* RE: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-11  1:35         ` David Schwartz
  2003-09-11 13:30           ` Eric W. Biederman
@ 2003-09-11 14:36           ` Alan Cox
  2003-09-13 17:42             ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-09-12 20:58           ` Timothy Miller
  2 siblings, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: Alan Cox @ 2003-09-11 14:36 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Schwartz; +Cc: Pascal Schmidt, Linux Kernel Mailing List

On Iau, 2003-09-11 at 02:35, David Schwartz wrote:
> 	The GPL puts no restrictions on use. The GPL_ONLY stuff does.

No it doesn't. It allows people to track whether you get support or not.
It prevents nothing.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* RE: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-11 13:30           ` Eric W. Biederman
@ 2003-09-11 18:39             ` David Schwartz
  2003-09-11 18:45               ` Mike Fedyk
  2003-09-13 17:34             ` Andre Hedrick
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: David Schwartz @ 2003-09-11 18:39 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Eric W. Biederman; +Cc: Pascal Schmidt, linux-kernel


	Combined responses.

> No the GPL_ONLY stuff is an attempt to document that there is no
> conceivable
> way that using a given symbol does not create a derived work.

	and:

> > 	The GPL puts no restrictions on use. The GPL_ONLY stuff does.

> No it doesn't. It allows people to track whether you get support or not.
> It prevents nothing.

	So long as it's not an attempt to use the GPL license as a way to restrict
use, there's no problem. There is no license restriction or enforcement
scheme here that one could possibly circumvent because the GPL_ONLY stuff is
not a license enforcement scheme. It cannot be a license enforcement scheme
because there are no license requirements that kick in upon any act other
than distribution.

	The GPL_ONLY stuff does in fact restrict use. However, this is a
restriction anyone is free to remove or circumvent if it bothers them. This
isn't a dishonorable act because nobody intended this mechanism to restrict
use -- I hope.

	DS



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-11 18:39             ` David Schwartz
@ 2003-09-11 18:45               ` Mike Fedyk
  2003-09-13 17:52                 ` Andre Hedrick
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: Mike Fedyk @ 2003-09-11 18:45 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Schwartz; +Cc: Eric W. Biederman, Pascal Schmidt, linux-kernel

On Thu, Sep 11, 2003 at 11:39:33AM -0700, David Schwartz wrote:
> 	The GPL_ONLY stuff does in fact restrict use. However, this is a
> restriction anyone is free to remove or circumvent if it bothers them. This
> isn't a dishonorable act because nobody intended this mechanism to restrict
> use -- I hope.

If effect it does affect use because of lack of support.  But personally I
agree with that...

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-11  1:35         ` David Schwartz
  2003-09-11 13:30           ` Eric W. Biederman
  2003-09-11 14:36           ` Alan Cox
@ 2003-09-12 20:58           ` Timothy Miller
  2003-09-12 21:47             ` Matt D. Robinson
                               ` (3 more replies)
  2 siblings, 4 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Timothy Miller @ 2003-09-12 20:58 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Schwartz; +Cc: Pascal Schmidt, linux-kernel



David Schwartz wrote:

> 	However, some people seem to be arguing that the GPL_ONLY symbols are in
> fact a license enforcement technique. If that's true, then when they
> distribute their code, they are putting additional restrictions not in the
> GPL on it. That is a GPL violation.

Agreed.  GPL_ONLY is not a license restriction.  It is a technical issue.

Binary-only modules are inherently untrustworthy (no open code review) 
and undebuggable.  It is therefore of technical merit to restrict both 
what they can access in the kernel (GPL_ONLY) and limit how much kernel 
developers should have to tolerate when they're involved.

But beyond this, there are some social issues.  If someone finds a way 
to work around this mechanism, they are breaking things to everyone 
else's detriment.  For a commercial entity to violate the GPL_ONLY 
barrier is an insult to kernel developers AND to their customers who 
will have trouble getting problems solved.

So, if a company works around GPL_ONLY, are they violating the GPL 
license?  Probably not.  Does that make it OKAY?  Probably not.

This is like finding a way to give a user space program access to kernel 
resources.  There are barriers put in place for a REASON because people 
make mistakes when they write software.  If no one did, we wouldn't have 
any need for memory protection, would we.



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-10 22:26     ` David Schwartz
  2003-09-10 22:34       ` Pascal Schmidt
@ 2003-09-12 21:04       ` Timothy Miller
  2003-09-12 21:17         ` David Schwartz
  2003-09-13 18:09         ` Andre Hedrick
  1 sibling, 2 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Timothy Miller @ 2003-09-12 21:04 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Schwartz; +Cc: Pascal Schmidt, linux-kernel



David Schwartz wrote:
>>On Wed, 10 Sep 2003 22:40:14 +0200, you wrote in linux.kernel:
> 
> 
>>>However, Richard Stallman does not agree with this view. It's his
>>>view that if the authors chose to give you the code, you can use it any
>>>way you want to, regardless of how the authors feel about that type of
>>>usage. This is why he created the GPL.
>>
> 
>>Use in any way you want to is the BSD license, not the GPL.
> 
> 
> 	Please show me one restriction on *use* in the GPL.
> 
> "Activities other than copying, distribution and modification are not
> covered by this License; they are outside its scope.  The act of
> running the Program is not restricted, and the output from the Program
> is covered only if its contents constitute a work based on the
> Program (independent of having been made by running the Program).
> Whether that is true depends on what the Program does."
> 
> 	Licenses that place restrictions on usage are *not* open source licenses.


What about "usage" of source code?

GPL says you are not allowed to "use" GPL source in a non-free program 
that you publish.

> 
>>The GPL
>>does restrict what you're allowed to do in order to keep the source
>>free...
> 
> 
> 	Yes, it restricts your ability to distribute and your ability to create
> derived works if and only if you distribute those derived works. It places
> no restrictions whatsoever on use. And since it requires distributors to
> place no restrictions not in the GPL, distributors cannot place *any*
> restrictions on usage either.

I don't think anyone was talking about use of applications, but rather 
use of source code.



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* RE: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-12 21:04       ` Timothy Miller
@ 2003-09-12 21:17         ` David Schwartz
  2003-09-15 18:24           ` Timothy Miller
  2003-09-13 18:09         ` Andre Hedrick
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: David Schwartz @ 2003-09-12 21:17 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Timothy Miller; +Cc: Pascal Schmidt, linux-kernel


> > 	Licenses that place restrictions on usage are *not* open
> > source licenses.

> What about "usage" of source code?

	Same thing.

> GPL says you are not allowed to "use" GPL source in a non-free program
> that you publish.

	This is a publication restriction, not a usage restriction. Your phrasing
above is like saying, "you can't put bullets into a gun that you use to
shoot a police officer". The restriction is on the shooting, not the
loading.

	Again, quoting the GPL:

Activities other than copying, distribution and modification are not
covered by this License; they are outside its scope.  The act of
running the Program is not restricted, and the output from the Program
is covered only if its contents constitute a work based on the
Program (independent of having been made by running the Program).
Whether that is true depends on what the Program does.

> I don't think anyone was talking about use of applications, but rather
> use of source code.

	I'm not sure why you think this is an important distinction.

	DS



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-12 20:58           ` Timothy Miller
@ 2003-09-12 21:47             ` Matt D. Robinson
  2003-09-12 22:31               ` Alan Cox
  2003-09-13 18:19             ` Andre Hedrick
                               ` (2 subsequent siblings)
  3 siblings, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: Matt D. Robinson @ 2003-09-12 21:47 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Timothy Miller; +Cc: David Schwartz, Pascal Schmidt, linux-kernel

On Fri, 12 Sep 2003, Timothy Miller wrote:
|>David Schwartz wrote:
|>
|>> 	However, some people seem to be arguing that the GPL_ONLY symbols are in
|>> fact a license enforcement technique. If that's true, then when they
|>> distribute their code, they are putting additional restrictions not in the
|>> GPL on it. That is a GPL violation.
|>
|>Agreed.  GPL_ONLY is not a license restriction.  It is a technical issue.
|>
|>Binary-only modules are inherently untrustworthy (no open code review) 
|>and undebuggable.  It is therefore of technical merit to restrict both 
|>what they can access in the kernel (GPL_ONLY) and limit how much kernel 
|>developers should have to tolerate when they're involved.
|>
|>But beyond this, there are some social issues.  If someone finds a way 
|>to work around this mechanism, they are breaking things to everyone 
|>else's detriment.  For a commercial entity to violate the GPL_ONLY 
|>barrier is an insult to kernel developers AND to their customers who 
|>will have trouble getting problems solved.

I think you are all missing the point.  This isn't a Linux kernel
problem.  This is a customer and distributor problem.  If Red Hat,
Mandrake, SuSE, etc., choose to remove these GPL_ONLY() barriers
and release the new "free" code under GPL, they're entitled.  Heck,
they can even add in new ones in their own kernels.

I'm surprised you are even discussing this issue on this list.

If third party developers are restricted based on GPL_ONLY(),
they can either (A) release their product under other OSes or Linux
distributions without the GPL_ONLY() restrictions, (B) modify their
product to be more GPL-friendly, or (C) avoid Linux support entirely.

It ultimately means either more support for third party products with
one distribution over another, which may or may not be financially
beneficial to that distribution, or it means that some Linux
distributors continue to supress supporting new third party devices
that don't believe in the GPL.  Either way, it's a distribution
decision based on open-source beliefs and how that balances with
financial benefit (both of which would matter to me as a stockholder).

This really has nothing to do with the Linux kernel code itself.
Very few customers that want third party device support will go to
vger to roll their own kernel -- they'll go to a Linux distributor,
get them to include device support and pay for it (or start with a
Linux distribution and roll their own).

So include GPL_ONLY(), don't include GPL_ONLY(), whatever.  If you
don't like it, Mr. Customer, find a Linux distributor that will
fix the problem for you.

If you want to create a new driver model that supports third party
devices without regard to their GPL status, make a patch.  Who
knows, maybe some distribution will actually start using it.  But
don't even think about bugging this list to get it included by
default (too many GPL purists out there).

--Matt


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-12 21:47             ` Matt D. Robinson
@ 2003-09-12 22:31               ` Alan Cox
  2003-09-12 23:26                 ` David Schwartz
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: Alan Cox @ 2003-09-12 22:31 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Matt D. Robinson
  Cc: Timothy Miller, David Schwartz, Pascal Schmidt,
	Linux Kernel Mailing List

On Gwe, 2003-09-12 at 22:47, Matt D. Robinson wrote:
> So include GPL_ONLY(), don't include GPL_ONLY(), whatever.  If you
> don't like it, Mr. Customer, find a Linux distributor that will
> fix the problem for you.

Linux vendors have already recieved, and decided to act on cease and
desist letters involving adding hooks (ie EXPORT_SYMBOL stuff) for non
free modules that were not in the base distro. I think that speaks for 
part of the legal view.



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* RE: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-12 22:31               ` Alan Cox
@ 2003-09-12 23:26                 ` David Schwartz
  2003-09-13  0:29                   ` Matt D. Robinson
                                     ` (2 more replies)
  0 siblings, 3 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: David Schwartz @ 2003-09-12 23:26 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Alan Cox, Matt D. Robinson
  Cc: Timothy Miller, Pascal Schmidt, Linux Kernel Mailing List


> On Gwe, 2003-09-12 at 22:47, Matt D. Robinson wrote:

> > So include GPL_ONLY(), don't include GPL_ONLY(), whatever.  If you
> > don't like it, Mr. Customer, find a Linux distributor that will
> > fix the problem for you.

> Linux vendors have already recieved, and decided to act on cease and
> desist letters involving adding hooks (ie EXPORT_SYMBOL stuff) for non
> free modules that were not in the base distro. I think that speaks for
> part of the legal view.

	Who is sending these letters? Who has no respect for the GPL and seeks to
add additional restrictions? IMO, these letters are almost as bad as the SCO
letters. Nobody has any business putting additional licensing restrictions
on code was placed under the GPL.

	DS



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* RE: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-12 23:26                 ` David Schwartz
@ 2003-09-13  0:29                   ` Matt D. Robinson
  2003-09-13 17:42                     ` Alan Cox
  2003-09-13  5:38                   ` jw schultz
  2003-09-13 17:44                   ` Alan Cox
  2 siblings, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: Matt D. Robinson @ 2003-09-13  0:29 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Schwartz
  Cc: Alan Cox, Timothy Miller, Pascal Schmidt, Linux Kernel Mailing List

On Fri, 12 Sep 2003, David Schwartz wrote:
|>> On Gwe, 2003-09-12 at 22:47, Matt D. Robinson wrote:
|>> > So include GPL_ONLY(), don't include GPL_ONLY(), whatever.  If you
|>> > don't like it, Mr. Customer, find a Linux distributor that will
|>> > fix the problem for you.
|>
|>> Linux vendors have already recieved, and decided to act on cease and
|>> desist letters involving adding hooks (ie EXPORT_SYMBOL stuff) for non
|>> free modules that were not in the base distro. I think that speaks for
|>> part of the legal view.
|>
|>	Who is sending these letters? Who has no respect for the GPL and seeks to
|>add additional restrictions? IMO, these letters are almost as bad as the SCO
|>letters. Nobody has any business putting additional licensing restrictions
|>on code was placed under the GPL.
|>
|>	DS

FUD, Inc.  If these really did exist, they would be more commonly
known and I'm certain would affect customer choice.  IMHO, I think
this is the vendor's (and I specifically think of Red Hat) way of
excusing themselves from having to work with third party vendors
in order to cover themselves legally with groups like the FSF.
Whether that's true or not, or if there is some other developer
contingent at these distribution houses that is preventing the
EXPORT_SYMBOL{,GPL}() changes due to personal bias, I don't know.
And I doubt we'll ever know.

These letters are like WMD -- they exist, you know they do, but you
just can't find them. :)

--Matt


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-12 23:26                 ` David Schwartz
  2003-09-13  0:29                   ` Matt D. Robinson
@ 2003-09-13  5:38                   ` jw schultz
  2003-09-13 17:44                   ` Alan Cox
  2 siblings, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: jw schultz @ 2003-09-13  5:38 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Linux Kernel Mailing List

On Fri, Sep 12, 2003 at 04:26:19PM -0700, David Schwartz wrote:
> 
> > On Gwe, 2003-09-12 at 22:47, Matt D. Robinson wrote:
> 
> > > So include GPL_ONLY(), don't include GPL_ONLY(), whatever.  If you
> > > don't like it, Mr. Customer, find a Linux distributor that will
> > > fix the problem for you.
> 
> > Linux vendors have already recieved, and decided to act on cease and
> > desist letters involving adding hooks (ie EXPORT_SYMBOL stuff) for non
> > free modules that were not in the base distro. I think that speaks for
> > part of the legal view.
> 
> 	Who is sending these letters? Who has no respect for the GPL and seeks to
> add additional restrictions? IMO, these letters are almost as bad as the SCO
> letters. Nobody has any business putting additional licensing restrictions
> on code was placed under the GPL.

I don't know who but i can say that Linus or anyone he
assigns can do so based not on GPL but on trademark.  That is
to say that while it wouldn't be a violation of the
copyright license to distribute such modified code but it
would be within the rights of the trademark holder (Linus)
to refuse them the _privilege_ of calling the modified code
Linux.  Not only would it be within his rights but it is
necessary for him to define and enforce restrictions on what
may be called Linux or he would lose that authority.

Just like you can make a copy of Red Hat's distribution but
without Red Hat Inc's explicit permission you cannot call it Red
Hat or Maroon Chapeau, etc.  For that matter the Open group
could, in theory, deny SCO the privilege of of calling their
own products UNIX.

-- 
________________________________________________________________
	J.W. Schultz            Pegasystems Technologies
	email address:		jw@pegasys.ws

		Remember Cernan and Schmitt

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* RE: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-10 22:34       ` Pascal Schmidt
  2003-09-11  1:35         ` David Schwartz
  2003-09-11  1:39         ` David Schwartz
@ 2003-09-13 17:11         ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-09-13 21:11           ` Pascal Schmidt
  2 siblings, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: Andre Hedrick @ 2003-09-13 17:11 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Pascal Schmidt; +Cc: David Schwartz, linux-kernel


On Thu, 11 Sep 2003, Pascal Schmidt wrote:

> On Wed, 10 Sep 2003, David Schwartz wrote:
> 
> > Please show me one restriction on *use* in the GPL.
> 
> Well, you may not *use* GPL'd code to produce a derived work and
> distribute it in binary form only. Use of the code, not use of
> the product, sure.

Prove an original work which uses the proper "unprotectable API" to
operate in the Linux kernel is a "derived work".

You can't and never will.  It is an "original work".

"Original works" are exempt, what is not clear?

Oh I get it, because it happens to work in "Linux" it is not an original
work?  What a lame cast of mental giants.


Andre


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-11 13:30           ` Eric W. Biederman
  2003-09-11 18:39             ` David Schwartz
@ 2003-09-13 17:34             ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-09-14 10:55               ` Sean Estabrooks
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: Andre Hedrick @ 2003-09-13 17:34 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Eric W. Biederman; +Cc: David Schwartz, Pascal Schmidt, linux-kernel


On 11 Sep 2003, Eric W. Biederman wrote:

> "David Schwartz" <davids@webmaster.com> writes:
> 
> > 	The GPL_ONLY stuff is an attempt to restrict use. There is nothing
> > inherently wrong with attempts to restrict use. One could argue that the
> > root permission check on 'umount' is a restriction on use. Surely the GPL
> > doesn't mean you can't have any usage restrictions at all.
> 
> No the GPL_ONLY stuff is an attempt to document that there is no conceivable
> way that using a given symbol does not create a derived work.  

Bzzit ... GPL_ONLY stuff is an attempt to retrict usage by removing access
to the unprotectable API.  And for anyone claiming there is not API to
protect, the kernel source is the manual to the API.  The foolish intent
and design to hide the API has caused the kernel itself to become the
manual.

This is even obvious to people, like myself, who are not lawyers.

Andre


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* RE: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-11 14:36           ` Alan Cox
@ 2003-09-13 17:42             ` Andre Hedrick
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Andre Hedrick @ 2003-09-13 17:42 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Alan Cox; +Cc: David Schwartz, Pascal Schmidt, Linux Kernel Mailing List


On Thu, 11 Sep 2003, Alan Cox wrote:

> On Iau, 2003-09-11 at 02:35, David Schwartz wrote:
> > 	The GPL puts no restrictions on use. The GPL_ONLY stuff does.
> 
> No it doesn't. It allows people to track whether you get support or not.
> It prevents nothing.

Then allow the usage and functionality of the SYMBOLS and not "steal" them
from usage.  If you say thay can be used without support.

PS it is "The Troll" again.

Just execute the reject of the License and have the means to reject
support.  You are so full of it to say it is for rejecting support when
anyone knows it removes usage of the SYMBOL == API.

Cheers,

Andre



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* RE: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-13  0:29                   ` Matt D. Robinson
@ 2003-09-13 17:42                     ` Alan Cox
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Alan Cox @ 2003-09-13 17:42 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Matt D. Robinson
  Cc: David Schwartz, Timothy Miller, Pascal Schmidt,
	Linux Kernel Mailing List

On Sad, 2003-09-13 at 01:29, Matt D. Robinson wrote:
> |>> Linux vendors have already recieved, and decided to act on cease and
> |>> desist letters involving adding hooks (ie EXPORT_SYMBOL stuff) for non
> |>> free modules that were not in the base distro. I think that speaks for
> |>> part of the legal view.

> FUD, Inc.  If these really did exist, they would be more commonly

It has happened. If you want to call me a liar feel free. Its your right
in a free society. It doesn't change the facts however.

Adding hooks for a proprietary module is a dubious practice. Doing it as
part of a two way arrangement with a proprietary vendor producing a non
free module is extremely unwise indeed.



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* RE: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-12 23:26                 ` David Schwartz
  2003-09-13  0:29                   ` Matt D. Robinson
  2003-09-13  5:38                   ` jw schultz
@ 2003-09-13 17:44                   ` Alan Cox
  2 siblings, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Alan Cox @ 2003-09-13 17:44 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Schwartz
  Cc: Matt D. Robinson, Timothy Miller, Pascal Schmidt,
	Linux Kernel Mailing List

On Sad, 2003-09-13 at 00:26, David Schwartz wrote:
> > On Gwe, 2003-09-12 at 22:47, Matt D. Robinson wrote:
> 	Who is sending these letters? Who has no respect for the GPL and seeks to
> add additional restrictions? IMO, these letters are almost as bad as the SCO
> letters. Nobody has any business putting additional licensing restrictions
> on code was placed under the GPL.

Nobody I've talked to (legal folks included) seems to think they are 
additional restrictions, merely people enforcing their copyright rights
against folks working as a group to conspire to create a derivative work
prohibited by the GPL.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-11 18:45               ` Mike Fedyk
@ 2003-09-13 17:52                 ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-09-13 23:54                   ` Erik Andersen
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: Andre Hedrick @ 2003-09-13 17:52 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Mike Fedyk
  Cc: David Schwartz, Eric W. Biederman, Pascal Schmidt, linux-kernel


On Thu, 11 Sep 2003, Mike Fedyk wrote:

> On Thu, Sep 11, 2003 at 11:39:33AM -0700, David Schwartz wrote:
> > 	The GPL_ONLY stuff does in fact restrict use. However, this is a
> > restriction anyone is free to remove or circumvent if it bothers them. This
> > isn't a dishonorable act because nobody intended this mechanism to restrict
> > use -- I hope.
> 
> If effect it does affect use because of lack of support.  But personally I
> agree with that...

I disagree that use == support.  Whatever happen to RTFM ?
Wait I forgot TFM became GPL_ONLY so you can not read it freely anymore.

Try getting support from RedHat without a support contract, LOL.

Try getting support from XMission for anything without a support contract.

Cheers,

Andre


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-12 21:04       ` Timothy Miller
  2003-09-12 21:17         ` David Schwartz
@ 2003-09-13 18:09         ` Andre Hedrick
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Andre Hedrick @ 2003-09-13 18:09 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Timothy Miller; +Cc: David Schwartz, Pascal Schmidt, linux-kernel


Timothy,

Who is talking about using "GPL source code", that is a given NO NO!
Calling symbols in the header files used as the generic functionality of
the kernel is all one could use in "Driver Model".  Beyond the simple
usage of header files, one is no longer in the land of API but usage of
raw GPL source.

Cheers,

Andre Hedrick
LAD Storage Consulting Group

On Fri, 12 Sep 2003, Timothy Miller wrote:

> 
> 
> David Schwartz wrote:
> >>On Wed, 10 Sep 2003 22:40:14 +0200, you wrote in linux.kernel:
> > 
> > 
> >>>However, Richard Stallman does not agree with this view. It's his
> >>>view that if the authors chose to give you the code, you can use it any
> >>>way you want to, regardless of how the authors feel about that type of
> >>>usage. This is why he created the GPL.
> >>
> > 
> >>Use in any way you want to is the BSD license, not the GPL.
> > 
> > 
> > 	Please show me one restriction on *use* in the GPL.
> > 
> > "Activities other than copying, distribution and modification are not
> > covered by this License; they are outside its scope.  The act of
> > running the Program is not restricted, and the output from the Program
> > is covered only if its contents constitute a work based on the
> > Program (independent of having been made by running the Program).
> > Whether that is true depends on what the Program does."
> > 
> > 	Licenses that place restrictions on usage are *not* open source licenses.
> 
> 
> What about "usage" of source code?
> 
> GPL says you are not allowed to "use" GPL source in a non-free program 
> that you publish.
> 
> > 
> >>The GPL
> >>does restrict what you're allowed to do in order to keep the source
> >>free...
> > 
> > 
> > 	Yes, it restricts your ability to distribute and your ability to create
> > derived works if and only if you distribute those derived works. It places
> > no restrictions whatsoever on use. And since it requires distributors to
> > place no restrictions not in the GPL, distributors cannot place *any*
> > restrictions on usage either.
> 
> I don't think anyone was talking about use of applications, but rather 
> use of source code.
> 
> 
> -
> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
> the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
> More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
> Please read the FAQ at  http://www.tux.org/lkml/
> 


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-12 20:58           ` Timothy Miller
  2003-09-12 21:47             ` Matt D. Robinson
@ 2003-09-13 18:19             ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-09-13 20:01               ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-09-14  1:57             ` Erik Andersen
  2003-10-29 22:42             ` People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model] David Schwartz
  3 siblings, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: Andre Hedrick @ 2003-09-13 18:19 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Timothy Miller; +Cc: David Schwartz, Pascal Schmidt, linux-kernel



On Fri, 12 Sep 2003, Timothy Miller wrote:

> 
> 
> David Schwartz wrote:
> 
> > 	However, some people seem to be arguing that the GPL_ONLY symbols are in
> > fact a license enforcement technique. If that's true, then when they
> > distribute their code, they are putting additional restrictions not in the
> > GPL on it. That is a GPL violation.
> 
> Agreed.  GPL_ONLY is not a license restriction.  It is a technical issue.

Technical if and only if it did not remove the functionality of the
symbol when called.

Since it remove the ability to call and it work, creates a restriction of
usaged.  Usage being, one calls the function and it works.

I have not decided yet to expose one of the grossest example of API thieft
yet, but will do so in time.

> Binary-only modules are inherently untrustworthy (no open code review) 
> and undebuggable.  It is therefore of technical merit to restrict both 
> what they can access in the kernel (GPL_ONLY) and limit how much kernel 
> developers should have to tolerate when they're involved.

Who cares, it reports a tainted and the community says, thank you have a
nice day.

> But beyond this, there are some social issues.  If someone finds a way 
> to work around this mechanism, they are breaking things to everyone 
> else's detriment.  For a commercial entity to violate the GPL_ONLY 
> barrier is an insult to kernel developers AND to their customers who 
> will have trouble getting problems solved.

So when is the last time a business sent it problems to LKML to be
solved?  If I were a customer of such a company, I would be gone.

> So, if a company works around GPL_ONLY, are they violating the GPL 
> license?  Probably not.  Does that make it OKAY?  Probably not.

GPL_ONLY violate usage, thus it violate GPL.
Not a hard concept.
Also what if a company produces a "private gpl" product?
Open Source to customers but not to the world?

Nan, nobody would do that silly idea.

> This is like finding a way to give a user space program access to kernel 
> resources.  There are barriers put in place for a REASON because people 
> make mistakes when they write software.  If no one did, we wouldn't have 
> any need for memory protection, would we.

Stop, the laughing hurts "memory protection" "vm" ...

Cheers,

Andre


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-13 18:19             ` Andre Hedrick
@ 2003-09-13 20:01               ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-09-13 23:17                 ` Andre Hedrick
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: Andre Hedrick @ 2003-09-13 20:01 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-kernel


SYMBOL in question "dequeue_signal"

*************************************

pwd :: /usr/src/linux-2.4.18-27/kernel/signal.c

/*
 * Dequeue a signal and return the element to the caller, which is
 * expected to free it.
 *
 * All callers must be holding current->sigmask_lock.
 */

int
dequeue_signal(sigset_t *mask, siginfo_t *info)
{
        int sig = 0;

#if DEBUG_SIG
printk("SIG dequeue (%s:%d): %d ", current->comm, current->pid,
        signal_pending(current));
#endif

        sig = next_signal(current, mask);
        if (sig) {
                if (current->notifier) {
                        if (sigismember(current->notifier_mask, sig)) {
                                if (!(current->notifier)(current->notifier_data)) {
                                        current->sigpending = 0;
                                        return 0;
                                }
                        }
                }

                if (!collect_signal(sig, &current->pending, info))
                        sig = 0;

                /* XXX: Once POSIX.1b timers are in, if si_code == SI_TIMER,
                   we need to xchg out the timer overrun values.  */
        }
        recalc_sigpending(current);

#if DEBUG_SIG
printk(" %d -> %d\n", signal_pending(current), sig);
#endif

        return sig;
}

EXPORT_SYMBOL(dequeue_signal);
EXPORT_SYMBOL(flush_signals);

*************************************

pwd :: /usr/src/linux-2.4.20-18.9/kernel/signal.c

static int __dequeue_signal(struct sigpending *pending, sigset_t *mask,
                        siginfo_t *info)
{
        int sig = 0;

        sig = next_signal(pending, mask);
        if (sig) {
                if (current->notifier) {
                        if (sigismember(current->notifier_mask, sig)) {
                                if (!(current->notifier)(current->notifier_data)) {
                                        current->sigpending = 0;
                                        return 0;
                                }
                        }
                }

                if (!collect_signal(sig, pending, info))
                        sig = 0;

                /* XXX: Once POSIX.1b timers are in, if si_code == SI_TIMER,
                   we need to xchg out the timer overrun values.  */
        }
        recalc_sigpending();

        return sig;
}

/*
 * Dequeue a signal and return the element to the caller, which is
 * expected to free it.
 *
 * All callers have to hold the siglock.
 */
int dequeue_signal(sigset_t *mask, siginfo_t *info)
{
        int signr = __dequeue_signal(&current->pending, mask, info);
        if (!signr)
                signr = __dequeue_signal(&current->signal->shared_pending,
                                         mask, info);
        return signr;
}


EXPORT_SYMBOL(recalc_sigpending);
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(dequeue_signal);
EXPORT_SYMBOL(flush_signals);

*************************************


Now it is totally clear this is an attempt to strip and remove
functionality of the API, period.

But this is to obvious to miss.

Regards,

Andre Hedrick
LAD Storage Consulting Group




^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* RE: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-13 17:11         ` Andre Hedrick
@ 2003-09-13 21:11           ` Pascal Schmidt
  2003-09-13 21:19             ` David Schwartz
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: Pascal Schmidt @ 2003-09-13 21:11 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andre Hedrick; +Cc: linux-kernel

On Sat, 13 Sep 2003, Andre Hedrick wrote:

> Prove an original work which uses the proper "unprotectable API" to
> operate in the Linux kernel is a "derived work".

I never claimed such a thing. Whether an API is unprotectable or not
is a question for the lawyers.

If people put GPL_ONLY symbol exports in their code, that's their call
to make, is it not? It's their code and they're free to say "well, this
is my code, and if you use this symbol, I consider your stuff to be a
derived work". Once again it's up to the lawyers to decide whether
this has legal value or not.

-- 
Ciao,
Pascal


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* RE: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-13 21:19             ` David Schwartz
@ 2003-09-13 21:12               ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-09-13 22:09               ` Alan Cox
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Andre Hedrick @ 2003-09-13 21:12 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Schwartz; +Cc: Pascal Schmidt, linux-kernel


David,

Agreed the total intent by the author is to impose a restriction.
Thus the author by default lost his/her right to use, period.
Ironic, how imposing a usage restriction will terminate ones own write to
use.

Cheers,

Andre Hedrick
LAD Storage Consulting Group

On Sat, 13 Sep 2003, David Schwartz wrote:

> 
>  
> > If people put GPL_ONLY symbol exports in their code, that's their call
> > to make, is it not? It's their code and they're free to say "well, this
> > is my code, and if you use this symbol, I consider your stuff to be a
> > derived work". Once again it's up to the lawyers to decide whether
> > this has legal value or not.
> 
> 	If it has legal value, then it's an additional restriction.
> 
> 	DS
> 
> 
> -
> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
> the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
> More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
> Please read the FAQ at  http://www.tux.org/lkml/
> 


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* RE: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-13 21:11           ` Pascal Schmidt
@ 2003-09-13 21:19             ` David Schwartz
  2003-09-13 21:12               ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-09-13 22:09               ` Alan Cox
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: David Schwartz @ 2003-09-13 21:19 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Pascal Schmidt, Andre Hedrick; +Cc: linux-kernel


 
> If people put GPL_ONLY symbol exports in their code, that's their call
> to make, is it not? It's their code and they're free to say "well, this
> is my code, and if you use this symbol, I consider your stuff to be a
> derived work". Once again it's up to the lawyers to decide whether
> this has legal value or not.

	If it has legal value, then it's an additional restriction.

	DS



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* RE: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-13 21:19             ` David Schwartz
  2003-09-13 21:12               ` Andre Hedrick
@ 2003-09-13 22:09               ` Alan Cox
  2003-09-13 22:30                 ` David Schwartz
  2003-09-13 23:00                 ` Andre Hedrick
  1 sibling, 2 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Alan Cox @ 2003-09-13 22:09 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Schwartz; +Cc: Pascal Schmidt, Andre Hedrick, Linux Kernel Mailing List

On Sad, 2003-09-13 at 22:19, David Schwartz wrote:
>  
> > If people put GPL_ONLY symbol exports in their code, that's their call
> > to make, is it not? It's their code and they're free to say "well, this
> > is my code, and if you use this symbol, I consider your stuff to be a
> > derived work". Once again it's up to the lawyers to decide whether
> > this has legal value or not.
> 
> 	If it has legal value, then it's an additional restriction.

If it has legal value in showing the work is derivative thats not an
additional restriction. Its merely showing the intent of the author. If 
someone creates a work and its found to be derivative and they didnt
make it GPL compatible they get sued, thats also not an additional
restriction its what the GPL says anyway.

That is the whole point of EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL, it doesn't enforce
anything and Linus was absolutely specific it should not do the
enforcing. Its a hint and a support filter.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* RE: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-13 22:09               ` Alan Cox
@ 2003-09-13 22:30                 ` David Schwartz
  2003-09-14  1:16                   ` Andrew Pimlott
  2003-09-15 15:26                   ` Martin Schlemmer
  2003-09-13 23:00                 ` Andre Hedrick
  1 sibling, 2 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: David Schwartz @ 2003-09-13 22:30 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Alan Cox; +Cc: Pascal Schmidt, Andre Hedrick, Linux Kernel Mailing List



> On Sad, 2003-09-13 at 22:19, David Schwartz wrote:

> > > If people put GPL_ONLY symbol exports in their code, that's their call
> > > to make, is it not? It's their code and they're free to say
> > > "well, this
> > > is my code, and if you use this symbol, I consider your stuff to be a
> > > derived work". Once again it's up to the lawyers to decide whether
> > > this has legal value or not.

> > 	If it has legal value, then it's an additional restriction.

> If it has legal value in showing the work is derivative thats not an
> additional restriction.

	If the work would not have been restricted without it and is restricted
with it and you can't remove it, it's an additional restriction. If not,
what would an additional restriction be?

> Its merely showing the intent of the author.

	The intent of the author has no bearing on whether or not a work is
derived.

> If
> someone creates a work and its found to be derivative and they didnt
> make it GPL compatible they get sued, thats also not an additional
> restriction its what the GPL says anyway.

	Show me where the GPL says you have to GPL derived works that you don't
distribute. That restriction is found nowhere in the GPL and if you
attempted to impose such a restriction, it would be an additional one.

> That is the whole point of EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL, it doesn't enforce
> anything and Linus was absolutely specific it should not do the
> enforcing. Its a hint and a support filter.

	If it doesn't enforce anything and isn't a license restriction, then it's
perfectly legal and kosher to remove it.

	DS



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* RE: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-13 22:09               ` Alan Cox
  2003-09-13 22:30                 ` David Schwartz
@ 2003-09-13 23:00                 ` Andre Hedrick
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Andre Hedrick @ 2003-09-13 23:00 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Alan Cox; +Cc: David Schwartz, Pascal Schmidt, Linux Kernel Mailing List


Alan,

Taking you at face value, as always in the past, how does one parse
between "usage"/"enforcement"?

Can a non-gpl object call, use, and it work "EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL"?

If EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL allows functionality, then it does not "enforce" any
license issues.  If it is called and then allowed to quietly fail or not
function unless the caller's associated LICENSE is "GPL", then it does
enforce, restrict and prevents 'functional' usage.

If this is a "NEW SYMBOL" one may have an arguement to hold.

If it is an "OLD SYMBOL", or the old one is removed and replaced with an
random new one, yet the core functionality of the operations are the same,
the intent is to break or terminate usage.

If EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL is to be a notifier to let end-user be aware that a
binary vendor may be operating in a grey region of "derived" work, fine.
Allow it to operate but make noise.

Pretend it is doing the NOVELL thing of exceeding license count, and make
noise.

It is all to simple to bypass, and if the TAINTING issues for detection
is truly only to ignore issues from non-gpl sourced drivers, then great.

I know you have killfiled me by now, but how goes business school for the
MBA?  Does this mean you are going to quit Linux?

Cheers,

Andre Hedrick
LAD Storage Consulting Group

On Sat, 13 Sep 2003, Alan Cox wrote:

> On Sad, 2003-09-13 at 22:19, David Schwartz wrote:
> >  
> > > If people put GPL_ONLY symbol exports in their code, that's their call
> > > to make, is it not? It's their code and they're free to say "well, this
> > > is my code, and if you use this symbol, I consider your stuff to be a
> > > derived work". Once again it's up to the lawyers to decide whether
> > > this has legal value or not.
> > 
> > 	If it has legal value, then it's an additional restriction.
> 
> If it has legal value in showing the work is derivative thats not an
> additional restriction. Its merely showing the intent of the author. If 
> someone creates a work and its found to be derivative and they didnt
> make it GPL compatible they get sued, thats also not an additional
> restriction its what the GPL says anyway.
> 
> That is the whole point of EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL, it doesn't enforce
> anything and Linus was absolutely specific it should not do the
> enforcing. Its a hint and a support filter.
> 
> -
> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
> the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
> More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
> Please read the FAQ at  http://www.tux.org/lkml/
> 


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-13 20:01               ` Andre Hedrick
@ 2003-09-13 23:17                 ` Andre Hedrick
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Andre Hedrick @ 2003-09-13 23:17 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-kernel


more examples of SYMBOL rip offs.

2.6.0-test5

./kernel/exit.c

static inline void __exit_fs(struct task_struct *tsk)
{
        struct fs_struct * fs = tsk->fs;

        if (fs) {
                task_lock(tsk);
                tsk->fs = NULL;
                task_unlock(tsk);
                __put_fs_struct(fs);
        }
}

void exit_fs(struct task_struct *tsk)
{
        __exit_fs(tsk);
}

./kernel/fork.c

static inline struct fs_struct *__copy_fs_struct(struct fs_struct *old)
{
        struct fs_struct *fs = kmem_cache_alloc(fs_cachep, GFP_KERNEL);
        /* We don't need to lock fs - think why ;-) */
        if (fs) {
                atomic_set(&fs->count, 1);
                fs->lock = RW_LOCK_UNLOCKED;
                fs->umask = old->umask;
                read_lock(&old->lock);
                fs->rootmnt = mntget(old->rootmnt);
                fs->root = dget(old->root);
                fs->pwdmnt = mntget(old->pwdmnt);
                fs->pwd = dget(old->pwd);
                if (old->altroot) {
                        fs->altrootmnt = mntget(old->altrootmnt);
                        fs->altroot = dget(old->altroot);
                } else {
                        fs->altrootmnt = NULL;
                        fs->altroot = NULL;
                }
                read_unlock(&old->lock);
        }
        return fs;
}

struct fs_struct *copy_fs_struct(struct fs_struct *old)
{
        return __copy_fs_struct(old);
}

EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(exit_fs);
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(copy_fs_struct);

This is what the issue is about!
Taking away the functionality of the API.

So much for choice anymore.



Andre Hedrick
LAD Storage Consulting Group



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-13 17:52                 ` Andre Hedrick
@ 2003-09-13 23:54                   ` Erik Andersen
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Erik Andersen @ 2003-09-13 23:54 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andre Hedrick
  Cc: Mike Fedyk, David Schwartz, Eric W. Biederman, Pascal Schmidt,
	linux-kernel

On Sat Sep 13, 2003 at 10:52:20AM -0700, Andre Hedrick wrote:
> Try getting support from XMission for anything without a support contract.

News flash, This just in!  XMission is an ISP and Eric Biederman
does not work for them
    http://www.xmission.com/

Eric Biederman, myself, and pretty much anybody around here that
wants a decent always-up internet connection run by folks with a
clue uses them.  They do not sell "support contracts".  As with
any company, they support their customers and nobody else.  And
their support is excellent.  Want to learn to install Linux?
They'll even show you how http://www.xmission.com/lif3/index.html

If you expect companies to support non-customers I have some fine
ocean-front property in New Mexico to sell you.

 -Erik

--
Erik B. Andersen             http://codepoet-consulting.com/
--This message was written using 73% post-consumer electrons--

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-13 22:30                 ` David Schwartz
@ 2003-09-14  1:16                   ` Andrew Pimlott
  2003-09-15 15:26                   ` Martin Schlemmer
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Andrew Pimlott @ 2003-09-14  1:16 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Schwartz
  Cc: Alan Cox, Pascal Schmidt, Andre Hedrick, Linux Kernel Mailing List

On Sat, Sep 13, 2003 at 03:30:35PM -0700, David Schwartz wrote:
> 	If the work would not have been restricted without it and is restricted
> with it and you can't remove it, it's an additional restriction. If not,
> what would an additional restriction be?

You can remove it.  But if you remove for with the obvious purpose
of abetting the distribution of non-GPL derived work, don't be
surprised to get smacked by courts who don't care for your technical
sophistry.

> > Its merely showing the intent of the author.
> 
> 	The intent of the author has no bearing on whether or not a work is
> derived.

I've noticed it's become common to say this, but (NAL) I doubt it's
true.  I would expect a court to respect the author's intent within
some narrow range that would otherwise be ambiguous.  Intent and
community standards play a large role in law.  If enough people wear
a path across private property, it can become an easement.

Andrew

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-12 20:58           ` Timothy Miller
  2003-09-12 21:47             ` Matt D. Robinson
  2003-09-13 18:19             ` Andre Hedrick
@ 2003-09-14  1:57             ` Erik Andersen
  2003-09-14  2:40               ` Andre Hedrick
                                 ` (2 more replies)
  2003-10-29 22:42             ` People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model] David Schwartz
  3 siblings, 3 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Erik Andersen @ 2003-09-14  1:57 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Timothy Miller; +Cc: David Schwartz, Pascal Schmidt, linux-kernel

On Fri Sep 12, 2003 at 04:58:03PM -0400, Timothy Miller wrote:
> 
> 
> David Schwartz wrote:
> 
> >	However, some people seem to be arguing that the GPL_ONLY symbols 
> >	are in
> >fact a license enforcement technique. If that's true, then when they
> >distribute their code, they are putting additional restrictions not in the
> >GPL on it. That is a GPL violation.
> 
> Agreed.  GPL_ONLY is not a license restriction.  It is a technical issue.

I'll go even farther, and say that one might call the GPL_ONLY
symbols an "effective technological measure" that "effectively
controls access to a work" and "effectively protects a right of a
copyright owner ... in the ordinary course of its operation....".
Bypassing GPL_ONLY symbols, as recently advocated by David
Schwartz and Andre Hedrick, could be considered circumvention of
an effective technological measure.  Remember Dmitry Sklyarov,

 -Erik

--
Erik B. Andersen             http://codepoet-consulting.com/
--This message was written using 73% post-consumer electrons--

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-14  1:57             ` Erik Andersen
@ 2003-09-14  2:40               ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-09-14  3:42                 ` Erik Andersen
  2003-09-15  8:06                 ` David S. Miller
  2003-09-14  2:51               ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-09-14  3:05               ` GPL == DMCA [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]] Andre Hedrick
  2 siblings, 2 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Andre Hedrick @ 2003-09-14  2:40 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Erik Andersen
  Cc: Timothy Miller, David Schwartz, Pascal Schmidt, linux-kernel


Please Erik,

Go have your "DADDY" write another legal letter for you and send it my
way.  I will be happy to shove it down your pie hole.

There is a difference in blanket theift of the kernel API and any court
will point out that "fair usage" is proper.

PS how is your IRS media forensics gig going now that you do not have me
on your side to help you do the dirty work of sneaking around people's
hard drives.  I was smart enough to never teach you what I knew you could
never learn.

Later!

Andre Hedrick
LAD Storage Consulting Group

On Sat, 13 Sep 2003, Erik Andersen wrote:

> On Fri Sep 12, 2003 at 04:58:03PM -0400, Timothy Miller wrote:
> > 
> > 
> > David Schwartz wrote:
> > 
> > >	However, some people seem to be arguing that the GPL_ONLY symbols 
> > >	are in
> > >fact a license enforcement technique. If that's true, then when they
> > >distribute their code, they are putting additional restrictions not in the
> > >GPL on it. That is a GPL violation.
> > 
> > Agreed.  GPL_ONLY is not a license restriction.  It is a technical issue.
> 
> I'll go even farther, and say that one might call the GPL_ONLY
> symbols an "effective technological measure" that "effectively
> controls access to a work" and "effectively protects a right of a
> copyright owner ... in the ordinary course of its operation....".
> Bypassing GPL_ONLY symbols, as recently advocated by David
> Schwartz and Andre Hedrick, could be considered circumvention of
> an effective technological measure.  Remember Dmitry Sklyarov,
> 
>  -Erik
> 
> --
> Erik B. Andersen             http://codepoet-consulting.com/
> --This message was written using 73% post-consumer electrons--
> -
> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
> the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
> More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
> Please read the FAQ at  http://www.tux.org/lkml/
> 


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-14  1:57             ` Erik Andersen
  2003-09-14  2:40               ` Andre Hedrick
@ 2003-09-14  2:51               ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-09-14  3:05               ` GPL == DMCA [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]] Andre Hedrick
  2 siblings, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Andre Hedrick @ 2003-09-14  2:51 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Erik Andersen
  Cc: Timothy Miller, David Schwartz, Pascal Schmidt, linux-kernel


Erik:

One more thing you forgot!

Before you run around ranting about DMCA and CPRM and making suttle legal
threats.  Everyone here knows who put it on the line to gain control of
technology to prevent Content Protection Recordable Media from covering
the storage industry wide.  That is correct it was me.  I was the one and
only person ever to stand up and have a position to help everyone here to
take control of technology.  While all of my hard work was destroyed by
the brain-dead of the EFF by causing it to go underground.

So lets be real clear about your wild swings of DMCA, because the irony
will be back to haunt.  Threaten to strike me down with DMCA, what a child
you have become.

So this is where it goes ... Mighty Linux kills usage for business with
lawsuits like the MPAA and RIAA.

GPL == DMCA, this is the brush you swing paint well dude.

Cheers,

Andre Hedrick
LAD Storage Consulting Group

On Sat, 13 Sep 2003, Erik Andersen wrote:

> On Fri Sep 12, 2003 at 04:58:03PM -0400, Timothy Miller wrote:
> > 
> > 
> > David Schwartz wrote:
> > 
> > >	However, some people seem to be arguing that the GPL_ONLY symbols 
> > >	are in
> > >fact a license enforcement technique. If that's true, then when they
> > >distribute their code, they are putting additional restrictions not in the
> > >GPL on it. That is a GPL violation.
> > 
> > Agreed.  GPL_ONLY is not a license restriction.  It is a technical issue.
> 
> I'll go even farther, and say that one might call the GPL_ONLY
> symbols an "effective technological measure" that "effectively
> controls access to a work" and "effectively protects a right of a
> copyright owner ... in the ordinary course of its operation....".
> Bypassing GPL_ONLY symbols, as recently advocated by David
> Schwartz and Andre Hedrick, could be considered circumvention of
> an effective technological measure.  Remember Dmitry Sklyarov,
> 
>  -Erik
> 
> --
> Erik B. Andersen             http://codepoet-consulting.com/
> --This message was written using 73% post-consumer electrons--
> -
> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
> the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
> More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
> Please read the FAQ at  http://www.tux.org/lkml/
> 


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* GPL == DMCA [Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-09-14  1:57             ` Erik Andersen
  2003-09-14  2:40               ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-09-14  2:51               ` Andre Hedrick
@ 2003-09-14  3:05               ` Andre Hedrick
  2 siblings, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Andre Hedrick @ 2003-09-14  3:05 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-kernel; +Cc: Erik Andersen, Richard Stallman


On Sat, 13 Sep 2003, Erik Andersen wrote:

> On Fri Sep 12, 2003 at 04:58:03PM -0400, Timothy Miller wrote:
> > 
> > 
> > David Schwartz wrote:
> > 
> > >	However, some people seem to be arguing that the GPL_ONLY symbols 
> > >	are in
> > >fact a license enforcement technique. If that's true, then when they
> > >distribute their code, they are putting additional restrictions not in the
> > >GPL on it. That is a GPL violation.
> > 
> > Agreed.  GPL_ONLY is not a license restriction.  It is a technical issue.
> 
> I'll go even farther, and say that one might call the GPL_ONLY
> symbols an "effective technological measure" that "effectively
> controls access to a work" and "effectively protects a right of a
> copyright owner ... in the ordinary course of its operation....".
> Bypassing GPL_ONLY symbols, as recently advocated by David
> Schwartz and Andre Hedrick, could be considered circumvention of
> an effective technological measure.  Remember Dmitry Sklyarov,
> 
>  -Erik

Erik:

Dmitry Sklyarov was put in jail for DMCA.

Erik Anderson joins The Village People to sing "D M C A".

So "The Great 'Erik Anderson'" now threatens former opensource developer
with baiting tactics of GPL == DMCA.  This is beautiful.

Richard, I know you will enjoy this one.  People are thinking of
enforcing GPL via DMCA.  Basically killing the idea that people have the
freedom of choice when it comes to software.  Maybe Eben Moglen would like
to comment on this twisted idea of Mr. Erik Anderson.

I really don't care but this is to funny to pass up such a threat in a
public forum.

Cheer,

Andre Hedrick
LAD Storage Consulting Group

PS mental note, it takes two idiots to have a flame war, when am I going
quit being the second idiot, sigh.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-14  3:42                 ` Erik Andersen
@ 2003-09-14  3:36                   ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-09-14  4:37                     ` Erik Andersen
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: Andre Hedrick @ 2003-09-14  3:36 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Erik Andersen; +Cc: linux-kernel


On Sat, 13 Sep 2003, Erik Andersen wrote:

> On Sat Sep 13, 2003 at 07:40:52PM -0700, Andre Hedrick wrote:
> > 
> > Please Erik,
> > 
> > Go have your "DADDY" write another legal letter for you and send it my
> > way.  I will be happy to shove it down your pie hole.
> 
> Your intellect is truly dizzying.  I am left stunned by your
> carefully reasoned arguments.
> 
> > There is a difference in blanket theift of the kernel API and any court
> > will point out that "fair usage" is proper.
> 
> "fair usage" != "derivitive works" as any court will point out.
> 
>  -Erik

Wow ... Does "Original Work" have meaning?

Does an "Original Work" using only the standard kernel API headers to
interface mean it is a derived work?  You better go find a new lawyer.

"fair usage" of .h files as the API is standard.

Using any .c or kernel C code is a NO NO.

Later.

Andre Hedrick
LAD Storage Consulting Group



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-14  2:40               ` Andre Hedrick
@ 2003-09-14  3:42                 ` Erik Andersen
  2003-09-14  3:36                   ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-09-15  8:06                 ` David S. Miller
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: Erik Andersen @ 2003-09-14  3:42 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andre Hedrick
  Cc: Timothy Miller, David Schwartz, Pascal Schmidt, linux-kernel

On Sat Sep 13, 2003 at 07:40:52PM -0700, Andre Hedrick wrote:
> 
> Please Erik,
> 
> Go have your "DADDY" write another legal letter for you and send it my
> way.  I will be happy to shove it down your pie hole.

Your intellect is truly dizzying.  I am left stunned by your
carefully reasoned arguments.

> There is a difference in blanket theift of the kernel API and any court
> will point out that "fair usage" is proper.

"fair usage" != "derivitive works" as any court will point out.

 -Erik

--
Erik B. Andersen             http://codepoet-consulting.com/
--This message was written using 73% post-consumer electrons--

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-14  3:36                   ` Andre Hedrick
@ 2003-09-14  4:37                     ` Erik Andersen
  2003-09-14  4:58                       ` freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]] Andre Hedrick
  2003-09-14 21:40                       ` People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model] David Schwartz
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Erik Andersen @ 2003-09-14  4:37 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andre Hedrick; +Cc: linux-kernel

On Sat Sep 13, 2003 at 08:36:36PM -0700, Andre Hedrick wrote:
> Wow ... Does "Original Work" have meaning?
> 
> Does an "Original Work" using only the standard kernel API headers to
> interface mean it is a derived work?  You better go find a new lawyer.

You seem to be somewhat confused as to who needs a lawyer.  I'm
not the one asking this question.   I am also not the one trying
to make a closed source binary only product that runs within the
context of the Linux kernel, and then complaining that the GPL
wackos are ruining my business...  It seems to be that doing such
a thing would be a really stupid business model.

As I recall it is the One True(tm) iSCSI stack you are working
on, right?

> "fair usage" of .h files as the API is standard.
> 
> Using any .c or kernel C code is a NO NO.

I invite you to read the COPYING file included in each and every
kernel tarball.  There is exactly ONE exception granted in the
linux kernel copyright:

    This copyright does *not* cover user programs that use kernel
    services by normal system calls - this is merely considered
    normal use of the kernel, and does *not* fall under the
    heading of "derived work".

All the noise in the world about other exceptions is precisely
that, since the license granting use of the Linux kernel does
not contain any additional provisions.

Anything that can be identified as a "user program" that "use[s]
kernel services by normal system calls" is, by virtue of the above
license grant, doing so with permission and is therefore within
its rights.  So you can make all the closed source user space
only One True(tm) iSCSI stacks you want.

Anything that is not a "user program" (and I think everyone can
agree a kernel module is not a "user program") is therefore a
derivitive work.

Anything that is linked into the kernel (and I think everyone can
agree a kernel module is linked into the kernel) and is therefore
interfacing with kernel internals, rather than using "kernel
services by normal system calls" is therefore a derivitive work.

Laugh at people, mock people, rant, rave, wantever you want.
When you are done making noise, please have your laywer explain
how a closed source binary only product that runs within the
context of the Linux kernel is not a derivitive work, per the
very definition given in the kernel COPYING file that grants you
your limited rights for copying, distribution and modification,

 -Erik

--
Erik B. Andersen             http://codepoet-consulting.com/
--This message was written using 73% post-consumer electrons--

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-09-14  4:37                     ` Erik Andersen
@ 2003-09-14  4:58                       ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-09-14  5:39                         ` Erik Andersen
  2003-09-15  0:16                         ` Henning P. Schmiedehausen
  2003-09-14 21:40                       ` People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model] David Schwartz
  1 sibling, 2 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Andre Hedrick @ 2003-09-14  4:58 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Erik Andersen; +Cc: linux-kernel


Pretty Boy,

It is coming and the intent is to return all the stolen symbols.
It is free for anyone to use and enjoy the usage of Linux once again.
So everyone get in line and SUE ME for GPL'ed drivers.


/*
 * Original copyright notice:
 *
 * linux/kernel/freed_symbols.c
 *
 * Copyright (C) 2001-2003              Linux ATA Development
 *                                      Andre Hedrick <andre@linux-ide.org>
 *
 * GPL v2 and only version 2.
 */

/*
 * kernel/signal.c:EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(dequeue_signal);
 * returned to kernel API
 */
int freed_dequeue_signal(sigset_t *mask, siginfo_t *info)
{
        return dequeue_signal(mask, info);
}

EXPORT_SYMBOL(freed_dequeue_signal);

/*
 * was kernel/context.c
 *
 * kernel/workqueue.c:EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(create_workqueue);
 * kernel/workqueue.c:EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(queue_work);
 * kernel/workqueue.c:EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(queue_delayed_work);
 * kernel/workqueue.c:EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(flush_workqueue);
 * kernel/workqueue.c:EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(destroy_workqueue);
 * returned to kernel API
 */

struct workqueue_struct *freed_create_workqueue(const char *name)
{
        return create_workqueue(name);
}

int freed_queue_work(struct workqueue_struct *wq, struct work_struct *work)
{
        return queue_work(wq, work);
}

int freed_queue_delayed_work(struct workqueue_struct *wq,
                struct work_struct *work, unsigned long delay)
{
        return queue_delayed_work(wq, work, delay);
}

void freed_flush_workqueue(struct workqueue_struct *wq)
{
        flush_workqueue(wq);
}

void freed_destroy_workqueue(struct workqueue_struct *wq)
{
        destroy_workqueue(wq);
}

EXPORT_SYMBOL(freed_create_workqueue);
EXPORT_SYMBOL(freed_queue_work);
EXPORT_SYMBOL(freed_queue_delayed_work);
EXPORT_SYMBOL(freed_flush_workqueue);
EXPORT_SYMBOL(freed_destroy_workqueue);


static int freed_symbols_ioctl (struct inode *inode, struct file *file, unsigned int cmd, unsigned long arg)
{
        if (!capable(CAP_SYS_ADMIN))
                return -EACCES;

        switch (cmd) {
                default:
                        return -EINVAL;
        }
        return 0;
}

static int freed_symbols_open (struct inode *inode, struct file *file)
{
        return 0;
}

static int freed_symbols_release (struct inode *inode, struct file *file)
{
        return 0;
}

static struct file_operations freed_symbols_fops = {
        owner:          THIS_MODULE,
        ioctl:          freed_symbols_ioctl,
        open:           freed_symbols_open,
        release:        freed_symbols_release,
};

static struct miscdevice freed_symbols_dev = {  FREED_SYMBOLS_MINOR,
                                                "freed_symbols",
                                                &freed_symbols_fops };

static void __exit freed_symbols_exit (void)
{
        printk(KERN_INFO "freed_symbols_module: unloaded.\n");
//      remove_proc_entry("driver/freed_symbols", NULL);
        misc_deregister(&freed_symbols);
}

int __init freed_symbols_init (void)
{
        printk(KERN_INFO "freed_symbols_module: loaded.\n");
        misc_register(&freed_symbols_dev);
//      create_proc_read_entry("driver/freed_symbols", 0, 0, freed_symbols_read_proc, NULL);
        return 0;
}

MODULE_LICENSE("GPL");
module_init(freed_symbols_init);
module_exit(freed_symbols_exit);


-------------------------------------------

Cheers,

Andre Hedrick
LAD Storage Consulting Group



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-09-14  5:39                         ` Erik Andersen
@ 2003-09-14  5:32                           ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-09-14  6:41                             ` Erik Andersen
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: Andre Hedrick @ 2003-09-14  5:32 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Erik Andersen; +Cc: linux-kernel


Erik,

Explain how a symbol in 2.4 which was EXPORT_SYMBOL is now
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL in 2.6 ?

When you can explain why the API for functionallity in 2.4 is ripped off
like an old lady's purse by a two-bit punk and made nojn-functional in 2.6
you may have a point.

But, you know what, I don't give a damn (DGD).

It is wrong and the original intent when it was discussed was for "NEW
SYMBOLS ONLY".  But if distros can add in Symbols for code that does not
exist in the tree, why can't people change them?

But you have a nice day, and do you need a mail address for that letter
you want to send me?  Please make it on heavy stock, you need some fiber
in your diet.

Cheers,

Andre Hedrick
LAD Storage Consulting Group

On Sat, 13 Sep 2003, Erik Andersen wrote:

> On Sat Sep 13, 2003 at 09:58:41PM -0700, Andre Hedrick wrote:
> > 
> > Pretty Boy,
> > 
> > It is coming and the intent is to return all the stolen symbols.
> > It is free for anyone to use and enjoy the usage of Linux once again.
> > So everyone get in line and SUE ME for GPL'ed drivers.
> 
> Do whatever you want.  Its your life.  Laugh at people, mock
> people, rant, rave, violtate licenses, wantever you want.
> 
> When you are done making noise, please explain how a closed
> source binary only product that runs within the context of the
> Linux kernel is not a derivitive work, per the very definition
> given in the kernel COPYING file that grants you your limited
> rights for copying, distribution and modification,
> 
>  -Erik
> 
> --
> Erik B. Andersen             http://codepoet-consulting.com/
> --This message was written using 73% post-consumer electrons--
> 


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-09-14  4:58                       ` freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]] Andre Hedrick
@ 2003-09-14  5:39                         ` Erik Andersen
  2003-09-14  5:32                           ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-09-15  0:16                         ` Henning P. Schmiedehausen
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: Erik Andersen @ 2003-09-14  5:39 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andre Hedrick; +Cc: linux-kernel

On Sat Sep 13, 2003 at 09:58:41PM -0700, Andre Hedrick wrote:
> 
> Pretty Boy,
> 
> It is coming and the intent is to return all the stolen symbols.
> It is free for anyone to use and enjoy the usage of Linux once again.
> So everyone get in line and SUE ME for GPL'ed drivers.

Do whatever you want.  Its your life.  Laugh at people, mock
people, rant, rave, violtate licenses, wantever you want.

When you are done making noise, please explain how a closed
source binary only product that runs within the context of the
Linux kernel is not a derivitive work, per the very definition
given in the kernel COPYING file that grants you your limited
rights for copying, distribution and modification,

 -Erik

--
Erik B. Andersen             http://codepoet-consulting.com/
--This message was written using 73% post-consumer electrons--

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-09-14  5:32                           ` Andre Hedrick
@ 2003-09-14  6:41                             ` Erik Andersen
  2003-09-14  6:50                               ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-09-14  7:10                               ` Andre Hedrick
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Erik Andersen @ 2003-09-14  6:41 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andre Hedrick; +Cc: linux-kernel

On Sat Sep 13, 2003 at 10:32:38PM -0700, Andre Hedrick wrote:
> 
> Erik,
> 
> Explain how a symbol in 2.4 which was EXPORT_SYMBOL is now
> EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL in 2.6 ?
> 
> When you can explain why the API for functionallity in 2.4 is ripped off
> like an old lady's purse by a two-bit punk and made nojn-functional in 2.6
> you may have a point.

It doesn't matter what the symbol is called.  I personally agree
with you on this one point -- changing the symbols to use
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL type naming is deeply stupid.  

I think it is stupid because by implication, it suggests that any
exported symbols lacking such tags are somehow NOT under the GPL.

Per the COPYING file included with each and every copy of the
kernel, Linux is licensed under the GPL.  There are no provisions
in the linux kernel COPYING statement allowing non-GPL compatible
binary only closed source kernel modules.

You are therefore, entitled to abide by the precise terms and
conditions for copying, distribution and modification for the
Linux kernel.  This entitles you to change symbol names to
whatever makes you feel happy.

But you are also _required_ to abide by the precise terms and
conditions for copying, distribution and modification for the
Linux kernel, which stipulates that unless your code is a "user
[program] that [uses] kernel services by normal system calls", it
is a derived work and therefore must abide by the terms of the
GPL.

Creating and loading such a symbol renaming module is certainly
something you are entitled to do.  Using that module for
circumvention of an "effective technological measure" that
"effectively protects a right of a copyright owner ... in the
ordinary course of its operation...." could certainly open you to
legal action here in the USA.  I do not hold copyright on any of
the symbols in question, but someone does, and if they do not take
kindly to your circumvention device....

But the DMCA issues are merely an aside to the fundamental
problem.  A problem you have avoided in this thread with
gratuitous ad hominem attacks, with the "but Billy did it
first" defence, and similar nonsence.

When you are done making noise, please explain how a closed
source binary only product that runs within the context of the
Linux kernel is not a derivitive work, per the very definition
given in the kernel COPYING file that grants you your limited
rights for copying, distribution and modification.

 -Erik

--
Erik B. Andersen             http://codepoet-consulting.com/
--This message was written using 73% post-consumer electrons--

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-09-14  6:41                             ` Erik Andersen
@ 2003-09-14  6:50                               ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-09-14  7:10                               ` Andre Hedrick
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Andre Hedrick @ 2003-09-14  6:50 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Erik Andersen; +Cc: linux-kernel


Erik,

When you can answer why binary only modules are allowed to load regardless
of symbol usage, I will answer your question.  Since binary only modules
are allowed to load, this means they are intended to function.  If they
are intended to function, they must use the API for standard operations.

Removing the abilty for standard functionality means one does not want
them to function?  So if the kernel GPL-ONLY wonder blunders are thinking,
why let them load at all?

Clearly there is a "tainting" process?

If one can detect taint, one can reject loading.

If one reads ./include/linux/module.h

It clearly states any license is acceptable.

So when you can explain about "yes you can but not here", I will explain
the simple rules of how copyright and header files are to be used.

Now what does this have to do with a "freed_symbols" project?

Simple, it restores the symbols back to their original state before
everybody had a whining feast.  When they are restored back to original
state then simple usage of the headers compliance to the "unprotectable
interface" is normalized.  Go look up 1991 copyright rulings wrt SEGA.

It is all or nothing but both ways is not allowed, what do you think, we
all live in San Francisco?

Cheers,

Andre Hedrick
LAD Storage Consulting Group

On Sun, 14 Sep 2003, Erik Andersen wrote:

> On Sat Sep 13, 2003 at 10:32:38PM -0700, Andre Hedrick wrote:
> > 
> > Erik,
> > 
> > Explain how a symbol in 2.4 which was EXPORT_SYMBOL is now
> > EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL in 2.6 ?
> > 
> > When you can explain why the API for functionallity in 2.4 is ripped off
> > like an old lady's purse by a two-bit punk and made nojn-functional in 2.6
> > you may have a point.
> 
> It doesn't matter what the symbol is called.  I personally agree
> with you on this one point -- changing the symbols to use
> EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL type naming is deeply stupid.  
> 
> I think it is stupid because by implication, it suggests that any
> exported symbols lacking such tags are somehow NOT under the GPL.
> 
> Per the COPYING file included with each and every copy of the
> kernel, Linux is licensed under the GPL.  There are no provisions
> in the linux kernel COPYING statement allowing non-GPL compatible
> binary only closed source kernel modules.
> 
> You are therefore, entitled to abide by the precise terms and
> conditions for copying, distribution and modification for the
> Linux kernel.  This entitles you to change symbol names to
> whatever makes you feel happy.
> 
> But you are also _required_ to abide by the precise terms and
> conditions for copying, distribution and modification for the
> Linux kernel, which stipulates that unless your code is a "user
> [program] that [uses] kernel services by normal system calls", it
> is a derived work and therefore must abide by the terms of the
> GPL.
> 
> Creating and loading such a symbol renaming module is certainly
> something you are entitled to do.  Using that module for
> circumvention of an "effective technological measure" that
> "effectively protects a right of a copyright owner ... in the
> ordinary course of its operation...." could certainly open you to
> legal action here in the USA.  I do not hold copyright on any of
> the symbols in question, but someone does, and if they do not take
> kindly to your circumvention device....
> 
> But the DMCA issues are merely an aside to the fundamental
> problem.  A problem you have avoided in this thread with
> gratuitous ad hominem attacks, with the "but Billy did it
> first" defence, and similar nonsence.
> 
> When you are done making noise, please explain how a closed
> source binary only product that runs within the context of the
> Linux kernel is not a derivitive work, per the very definition
> given in the kernel COPYING file that grants you your limited
> rights for copying, distribution and modification.
> 
>  -Erik
> 
> --
> Erik B. Andersen             http://codepoet-consulting.com/
> --This message was written using 73% post-consumer electrons--
> -
> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
> the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
> More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
> Please read the FAQ at  http://www.tux.org/lkml/
> 


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-09-14  6:41                             ` Erik Andersen
  2003-09-14  6:50                               ` Andre Hedrick
@ 2003-09-14  7:10                               ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-09-14  8:08                                 ` Erik Andersen
  2003-09-14  8:45                                 ` Valdis.Kletnieks
  1 sibling, 2 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Andre Hedrick @ 2003-09-14  7:10 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Erik Andersen; +Cc: linux-kernel

On Sun, 14 Sep 2003, Erik Andersen wrote:

> On Sat Sep 13, 2003 at 10:32:38PM -0700, Andre Hedrick wrote:
> > 
> > Erik,
> > 
> > Explain how a symbol in 2.4 which was EXPORT_SYMBOL is now
> > EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL in 2.6 ?
> > 
> > When you can explain why the API for functionallity in 2.4 is ripped off
> > like an old lady's purse by a two-bit punk and made nojn-functional in 2.6
> > you may have a point.
> 
> It doesn't matter what the symbol is called.  I personally agree
> with you on this one point -- changing the symbols to use
> EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL type naming is deeply stupid.  
> 
> I think it is stupid because by implication, it suggests that any
> exported symbols lacking such tags are somehow NOT under the GPL.
> 
> Per the COPYING file included with each and every copy of the
> kernel, Linux is licensed under the GPL.  There are no provisions
> in the linux kernel COPYING statement allowing non-GPL compatible
> binary only closed source kernel modules.

See above, remove the EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL crap and then there is no need to
alter or change anything.  This restores the original API.


> You are therefore, entitled to abide by the precise terms and
> conditions for copying, distribution and modification for the
> Linux kernel.  This entitles you to change symbol names to
> whatever makes you feel happy.
> 
> But you are also _required_ to abide by the precise terms and
> conditions for copying, distribution and modification for the
> Linux kernel, which stipulates that unless your code is a "user
> [program] that [uses] kernel services by normal system calls", it
> is a derived work and therefore must abide by the terms of the
> GPL.

Nice, but "derived work" is bogus and we all know it.

> Creating and loading such a symbol renaming module is certainly
> something you are entitled to do.  Using that module for
> circumvention of an "effective technological measure" that
> "effectively protects a right of a copyright owner ... in the
> ordinary course of its operation...." could certainly open you to
> legal action here in the USA.  I do not hold copyright on any of
> the symbols in question, but someone does, and if they do not take
> kindly to your circumvention device....

See above, which you agree is stupid, make EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL go away and
nobody has to deal with API issues.

> But the DMCA issues are merely an aside to the fundamental
> problem.  A problem you have avoided in this thread with
> gratuitous ad hominem attacks, with the "but Billy did it
> first" defence, and similar nonsence.

Nope, you made threats.

> When you are done making noise, please explain how a closed
> source binary only product that runs within the context of the
> Linux kernel is not a derivitive work, per the very definition
> given in the kernel COPYING file that grants you your limited
> rights for copying, distribution and modification.

See above again, nobody has to do anything if the API is restored to it
original format.  Thus no changes, no modifications.  All of your points
are void.


Cheers,

Andre


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-09-14  7:10                               ` Andre Hedrick
@ 2003-09-14  8:08                                 ` Erik Andersen
  2003-09-15  0:17                                   ` Henning P. Schmiedehausen
  2003-09-14  8:45                                 ` Valdis.Kletnieks
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: Erik Andersen @ 2003-09-14  8:08 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andre Hedrick; +Cc: linux-kernel

On Sun Sep 14, 2003 at 12:10:27AM -0700, Andre Hedrick wrote:
> > When you are done making noise, please explain how a closed
> > source binary only product that runs within the context of the
> > Linux kernel is not a derivitive work, per the very definition
> > given in the kernel COPYING file that grants you your limited
> > rights for copying, distribution and modification.
> 
> See above again, nobody has to do anything if the API is restored to it
> original format.  Thus no changes, no modifications.  All of your points
> are void.

Truly a dizzying intellect!  All my points are void and it is ok
to load binary only modules in the Linux kernel without releasing
source for the derivitive work.  And the reason why it is ok to
thus violate the Linux kernel licence is because....  

Oh, I guess you forgot the part where you explain why this is
legal.  Sorry, but The Great Andre has Spoken isn't good enough. 
Sorry, I'm not going to ignore the man behind the curtain.

When you are done making noise, please explain how a closed
source binary only product that runs within the context of the
Linux kernel is not a derivitive work and therefore not subject
to the terms of the GPL, per the definition given in the kernel
COPYING file that grants you your limited rights for copying,
distribution and modification.

 -Erik

--
Erik B. Andersen             http://codepoet-consulting.com/
--This message was written using 73% post-consumer electrons--

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-09-14  7:10                               ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-09-14  8:08                                 ` Erik Andersen
@ 2003-09-14  8:45                                 ` Valdis.Kletnieks
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Valdis.Kletnieks @ 2003-09-14  8:45 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andre Hedrick; +Cc: Erik Andersen, linux-kernel

[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1284 bytes --]

On Sun, 14 Sep 2003 00:10:27 PDT, Andre Hedrick said:

> Nope, you made threats.

On Sat, 13 Sep 2003, Erik Andersen wrote:
> I'll go even farther, and say that one might call the GPL_ONLY
> symbols an "effective technological measure" that "effectively
> controls access to a work" and "effectively protects a right of a

to which you replied:

On Sat, 13 Sep 2003 19:40:52 -0700, Andre Hedrick said:
> Go have your "DADDY" write another legal letter for you and send it my
> way.  I will be happy to shove it down your pie hole.

Erik postulates a "one MIGHT" legal argument, and gets threatened with bodily
harm?  I think you've given up any moral high ground regarding threats.

You may want to just take a few days off - you're apparently not attached to
the same reality as the rest of us:

> If one reads ./include/linux/module.h
>
> It clearly states any license is acceptable.

Maybe if you apply the Bible Code to it, it's clearly stated, but all I see is
a reference that the MODULE_LICENSE macro will accept a parameter of
"Proprietary", and then goes on to say "it's there so the module in question
can be treated properly - just like a Jew in Warsaw in 1941 had to wear a star".

There. I said it.  The esteemed Mr Godwin says we're now free to get on with our lives.



[-- Attachment #2: Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 226 bytes --]

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-13 17:34             ` Andre Hedrick
@ 2003-09-14 10:55               ` Sean Estabrooks
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Sean Estabrooks @ 2003-09-14 10:55 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andre Hedrick; +Cc: ebiederm, davids, der.eremit, linux-kernel

On Sat, 13 Sep 2003 10:34:12 -0700 (PDT)
Andre Hedrick <andre@linux-ide.org> wrote:
> 
> On 11 Sep 2003, Eric W. Biederman wrote:
> 
> > "David Schwartz" <davids@webmaster.com> writes:
> > 
> > > 	The GPL_ONLY stuff is an attempt to restrict use. There is nothing
> > > inherently wrong with attempts to restrict use. One could argue that the
> > > root permission check on 'umount' is a restriction on use. Surely the GPL
> > > doesn't mean you can't have any usage restrictions at all.
> > 
> > No the GPL_ONLY stuff is an attempt to document that there is no conceivable
> > way that using a given symbol does not create a derived work.  
> 
> Bzzit ... GPL_ONLY stuff is an attempt to retrict usage by removing access
> to the unprotectable API.  And for anyone claiming there is not API to
> protect, the kernel source is the manual to the API.  The foolish intent
> and design to hide the API has caused the kernel itself to become the
> manual.
> 
> This is even obvious to people, like myself, who are not lawyers.

Andre,

You seem to be mixing two forms of "use"; the right to use GPL'd source
and the right to use an operational Linux kernel.    

You are free to take the source and do whatever you want with it, restricted
only by the terms of the GPL.  Other people have the right to do the same.
There is nothing in the GPL that says how a program must behave when 
_executing_.  Therefore, if you don't like how the resulting executable 
operates, _tough_.   Your option, and the _freedom_ provided by the GPL, 
is to fork the source. 

No different than a kernel provided by the Church of Holy Computation 
which refuses to operate on Sunday.   You may disagree with the 
restriction, but surely they are free to add such a restriction to their
kernel source.

As it stands, you are complaining about a _runtime_ restriction;  ignoring 
your ability to change the source.   By insisting that other people remove 
checks for license type, you are trying to restrict  what others do with 
_their_ source.  By design, the kernel is already full of runtime restrictions. 
There is nothing special about a runtime limitation imposed on modules 
lacking the GPL symbol.   Just to drive the point home,  please consider that there is nothing wrong with a kernel that refuses 
to load modules that _DO_ contain the GPL symbol.

In short, fork off...
Sean


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* RE: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-14  4:37                     ` Erik Andersen
  2003-09-14  4:58                       ` freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]] Andre Hedrick
@ 2003-09-14 21:40                       ` David Schwartz
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: David Schwartz @ 2003-09-14 21:40 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: andersen, Andre Hedrick; +Cc: linux-kernel


> I invite you to read the COPYING file included in each and every
> kernel tarball.  There is exactly ONE exception granted in the
> linux kernel copyright:
>
>     This copyright does *not* cover user programs that use kernel
>     services by normal system calls - this is merely considered
>     normal use of the kernel, and does *not* fall under the
>     heading of "derived work".

	You are mistaken about what this is. This is not an exception being
granted. Nobody has the authority to grant GPL exceptions unless they are
the sole author and the Linux kernel does not have a sole author.

> All the noise in the world about other exceptions is precisely
> that, since the license granting use of the Linux kernel does
> not contain any additional provisions.

	This is not a license provision, it's a license interpretation. If you can
show me why the interpretation doesn't apply to kernel modules, please do.

> Anything that can be identified as a "user program" that "use[s]
> kernel services by normal system calls" is, by virtue of the above
> license grant, doing so with permission and is therefore within
> its rights.  So you can make all the closed source user space
> only One True(tm) iSCSI stacks you want.

	Except it's not a license grant. If it is a license grant, please tell me
who had the authority to grant it.

> Anything that is not a "user program" (and I think everyone can
> agree a kernel module is not a "user program") is therefore a
> derivitive work.

	Hahahahhahaha! Oh, that's too funny. "All dogs are mammals" means things
that aren't dogs aren't mammals? My pencil isn't a "user program". Is it a
derivative work of the Linux kernel in your opinion?

> Anything that is linked into the kernel (and I think everyone can
> agree a kernel module is linked into the kernel) and is therefore
> interfacing with kernel internals, rather than using "kernel
> services by normal system calls" is therefore a derivitive work.
>
> Laugh at people, mock people, rant, rave, wantever you want.
> When you are done making noise, please have your laywer explain
> how a closed source binary only product that runs within the
> context of the Linux kernel is not a derivitive work, per the
> very definition given in the kernel COPYING file that grants you
> your limited rights for copying, distribution and modification,

	The same way a user program that runs within the context of the Linux
operating system is not a derivative work. A defined interface creates a
license boundary. If you can draw a line between the two works, neither is
derivative of the other.

	And you are still ignoring the entire point, which is that it doesn't
matter whether or not such modules are derivative works. The GPL puts no
restrictions whatsoever on the creation or usage of derivative works that
are not distributed. The GPL does not say that you cannot make derivative
works unless you GPL them.

	So the restriction GPL_ONLY places is *not* a restriction that exists in
the GPL which is the *only* license. Hence it does not enforce a license
restriction. It really is that simple.

	And when it comes to respecting the author's wishes, I respect the wishes
of the many people who contributed to the Linux kernel expecting the GPL to
ensure that usage remained unrestricted. I don't not respect the wishes of
the people who try to impose usage restrictions on other people's GPL'd code
and I thoroughly disrespect those who would wield the DMCA to restrict
modifications to code placed under the GPL.

	DS



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-09-14  4:58                       ` freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]] Andre Hedrick
  2003-09-14  5:39                         ` Erik Andersen
@ 2003-09-15  0:16                         ` Henning P. Schmiedehausen
  2003-09-15  0:27                           ` Justin Cormack
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: Henning P. Schmiedehausen @ 2003-09-15  0:16 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-kernel

Andre Hedrick <andre@linux-ide.org> writes:


>It is coming and the intent is to return all the stolen symbols.
>It is free for anyone to use and enjoy the usage of Linux once again.
>So everyone get in line and SUE ME for GPL'ed drivers.

[... module code that would re-export GPL-marked symbols as non-GPL-marked snipped ...]

Well,

generally speaking, you're of course right. You're simply using the
loophole of Linus' agreement to binary only modules to use a fully
GPL'ed module (which might use the _GPL symbols), then consider the
aggregation to be under GPL (IMHO correct) and then consider this
aggregation of kernel and your module to be still covered by Linus'
agreement (don't know whether this is true. You might want to actually
ask Linus himself... ;-) )

IMHO doing so might be the best way to make Linus (as the main
copyright holder on the kernel source) to simply revoke the "I won't
object to loading binary only modules in the GPL'ed kernel" agreement
and simply say "From Kernel 2.6 on, every aggregation of modules in
kernel space is considered to be an aggregation in the GPL v2 sense of
meaning as covered by the GPL v2. So if you want to load a module,
it's code is better be GPL'ed too".

In other words: You might force the copyright holder(s) of the Linux
kernel to kill your business model dead.

Is this really what you want? It's basically the same thing that
people do with BitKeeper and Mr. McVoy: Annoy the people that you
might depend on long enough and they might stop being friendly to you
[1]. You might want to ask yourself if this _really_ is what you want
to achieve.

	... just my random 0,02 Euro-Cent
		Henning

[1] The people opposing to BK might not use it themselves but they n
might be heavily using a project which might not be able to go on
without BK because the main developers have stated often enough, that
they won't be able to cope with the work load without BK: The Linux
kernel.
-- 
Dipl.-Inf. (Univ.) Henning P. Schmiedehausen          INTERMETA GmbH
hps@intermeta.de        +49 9131 50 654 0   http://www.intermeta.de/

Java, perl, Solaris, Linux, xSP Consulting, Web Services 
freelance consultant -- Jakarta Turbine Development  -- hero for hire

"Dominate!! Dominate!! Eat your young and aggregate! I have grotty silicon!" 
      -- AOL CD when played backwards  (User Friendly - 200-10-15)

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-09-14  8:08                                 ` Erik Andersen
@ 2003-09-15  0:17                                   ` Henning P. Schmiedehausen
  2003-09-15  5:57                                     ` Erik Andersen
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: Henning P. Schmiedehausen @ 2003-09-15  0:17 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-kernel

Erik Andersen <andersen@codepoet.org> writes:

>When you are done making noise, please explain how a closed
>source binary only product that runs within the context of the
>Linux kernel is not a derivitive work and therefore not subject
>to the terms of the GPL, per the definition given in the kernel
>COPYING file that grants you your limited rights for copying,
>distribution and modification.

"Because Linus said so".

	Regards
		Henning

-- 
Dipl.-Inf. (Univ.) Henning P. Schmiedehausen          INTERMETA GmbH
hps@intermeta.de        +49 9131 50 654 0   http://www.intermeta.de/

Java, perl, Solaris, Linux, xSP Consulting, Web Services 
freelance consultant -- Jakarta Turbine Development  -- hero for hire

"Dominate!! Dominate!! Eat your young and aggregate! I have grotty silicon!" 
      -- AOL CD when played backwards  (User Friendly - 200-10-15)

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-09-15  0:16                         ` Henning P. Schmiedehausen
@ 2003-09-15  0:27                           ` Justin Cormack
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Justin Cormack @ 2003-09-15  0:27 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: hps; +Cc: Kernel mailing list

On Mon, 2003-09-15 at 01:16, Henning P. Schmiedehausen wrote:
> Andre Hedrick <andre@linux-ide.org> writes:
> 
> 
> >It is coming and the intent is to return all the stolen symbols.
> >It is free for anyone to use and enjoy the usage of Linux once again.
> >So everyone get in line and SUE ME for GPL'ed drivers.
> 
> [... module code that would re-export GPL-marked symbols as non-GPL-marked snipped ...]
> 
> Well,
> 
> generally speaking, you're of course right. You're simply using the
> loophole of Linus' agreement to binary only modules to use a fully
> GPL'ed module (which might use the _GPL symbols), then consider the
> aggregation to be under GPL (IMHO correct) and then consider this
> aggregation of kernel and your module to be still covered by Linus'
> agreement (don't know whether this is true. You might want to actually
> ask Linus himself... ;-) )

actually (not that I was following the thread too closely) I thought the
GPL point in the dispute came down to the fact that as the kernel is
under GPL, you can change the export_symbols anywhere you like (under
the GPL) so you can export anything to a binary module.

To really enforce export to GPL only would be simple, you have the file
that exports symbols not under the GPL (and probably the loader to
really enforce it). Writing the license for that file/file loader
combination would be hard but maybe doable...




^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-09-15  0:17                                   ` Henning P. Schmiedehausen
@ 2003-09-15  5:57                                     ` Erik Andersen
  2003-09-15  6:14                                       ` Nick Piggin
  2003-10-05  0:52                                       ` Rob Landley
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Erik Andersen @ 2003-09-15  5:57 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Henning P. Schmiedehausen; +Cc: linux-kernel

On Mon Sep 15, 2003 at 12:17:37AM +0000, Henning P. Schmiedehausen wrote:
> Erik Andersen <andersen@codepoet.org> writes:
> 
> >When you are done making noise, please explain how a closed
> >source binary only product that runs within the context of the
> >Linux kernel is not a derivitive work and therefore not subject
> >to the terms of the GPL, per the definition given in the kernel
> >COPYING file that grants you your limited rights for copying,
> >distribution and modification.
> 
> "Because Linus said so".

It does not say "Because Linus said so" in the Linux kernel
COPYING file, which is the only official document that grants
legal permission to copy, distribute and/or modify the kernel.

And even if Linus says so, what about Alan Cox, David S. Miller,
Al Viro, Andrea Arcangeli, Jens Axboe, Donald Becker, Andries
Brouwer, Jeff Garzik, Dave Jones, Russell King, Rik van Riel,
Rusty Russell, Ted Ts'o, Stephen Tweedie, etc, etc, etc?  What do
they say?  After all, the Linux kernel ceased to be a
one-man-show well over 10 years ago.  I know I have personally
submitted all my patches to the Linux kernel per the GPL, not
some imagined "GPL + kernel module exceptions" license.

If Linus wanted to say "I'm relicensing Linux under the Microsoft
EULA effective immediately", he is certainly entitled to
relicence the bits he personally wrote, but nothing more.
Similarly, if Linus wants to say the kernel allows binary only
kernel modules, he can certainly say as much -- free speech
entitles him to say whatever he wants.  But he has no authority
to relicense the bits of code I wrote, or the code anyone else
wrote, without their express permission.  I have never been asked
to agree to some other kernel license, and to my knowledge,
neither has anyone else.  Therefore the license as stated in the
kernel COPYING file is in effect.

To change the license for the entire kernel would require asking
every kernel contributor of substance to agree to new licensing
terms.  I'm sure some people (such as Andre) would be overjoyed
to have a "GPL + module exceptions" license made official.  And
as you might imagine, others would be rather less enthusiastic.
And still others, such as Leonard Zubkoff may find it difficult
to make posthumous licensing decisions.

But until such an official re-licensing effort is undertaken and
sucessfully completed, the Linux kernel is and will remain
licensed under the bog standard GPL with the one exception that
"user programs that use kernel services by normal system calls"
and not derivitive works -- i.e. the licensing terms specified
in the linux kernel COPYING file.

 -Erik

--
Erik B. Andersen             http://codepoet-consulting.com/
--This message was written using 73% post-consumer electrons--

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-09-15  5:57                                     ` Erik Andersen
@ 2003-09-15  6:14                                       ` Nick Piggin
  2003-10-05  0:52                                       ` Rob Landley
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Nick Piggin @ 2003-09-15  6:14 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: andersen; +Cc: Henning P. Schmiedehausen, linux-kernel



Erik Andersen wrote:

>On Mon Sep 15, 2003 at 12:17:37AM +0000, Henning P. Schmiedehausen wrote:
>
>>Erik Andersen <andersen@codepoet.org> writes:
>>
>>
>>>When you are done making noise, please explain how a closed
>>>source binary only product that runs within the context of the
>>>Linux kernel is not a derivitive work and therefore not subject
>>>to the terms of the GPL, per the definition given in the kernel
>>>COPYING file that grants you your limited rights for copying,
>>>distribution and modification.
>>>
>>"Because Linus said so".
>>
>
>It does not say "Because Linus said so" in the Linux kernel
>COPYING file, which is the only official document that grants
>legal permission to copy, distribute and/or modify the kernel.
>

How about taking the "GPL exported" symbols just as notes which show
their usage is not considered a derivative work by the copyright 
holders? This is what I always thought it was there for. This of course
means someone can't simply add that "note" and expect it to change the
way the copyright holders think of their work.

I don't expect this would do much in court, but isn't that for binary
driver people to worry about because it is granting more rights than
the GPL allows. Maybe it could be written in legalease to give them
more confidence. And it lets open source developers know where they
stand.



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-14  2:40               ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-09-14  3:42                 ` Erik Andersen
@ 2003-09-15  8:06                 ` David S. Miller
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: David S. Miller @ 2003-09-15  8:06 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andre Hedrick; +Cc: andersen, miller, davids, der.eremit, linux-kernel

On Sat, 13 Sep 2003 19:40:52 -0700 (PDT)
Andre Hedrick <andre@linux-ide.org> wrote:

> Go have your "DADDY" write another legal letter for you and send it my
> way.  I will be happy to shove it down your pie hole.

Umm, that's enough of this thread ok?

Take it to gnu.misc.discuss or whipme.beatme.i.like.it

And this is a one time warning, open defiance and continuing this
thread will cost anyone their access to vger.  This kind of
"let's abuse people" threads cannot continue unchecked, and Andre
you are on terribly thin ice ok?

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* RE: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-13 22:30                 ` David Schwartz
  2003-09-14  1:16                   ` Andrew Pimlott
@ 2003-09-15 15:26                   ` Martin Schlemmer
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Martin Schlemmer @ 2003-09-15 15:26 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Schwartz
  Cc: Alan Cox, Pascal Schmidt, Andre Hedrick, Linux Kernel Mailing List

On Sun, 2003-09-14 at 00:30, David Schwartz wrote:

This is starting to get one of those threads that really
should have ended a _long_ time ago.

> 
> > > 	If it has legal value, then it's an additional restriction.
> 
> > If it has legal value in showing the work is derivative thats not an
> > additional restriction.
> 
> 	If the work would not have been restricted without it and is restricted
> with it and you can't remove it, it's an additional restriction. If not,
> what would an additional restriction be?
> 

Read further on - it in itself is not a legal issue as such.

> > Its merely showing the intent of the author.
> 
> 	The intent of the author has no bearing on whether or not a work is
> derived.
> 

If you read the ending part of Alan's message, you will see where
this fits into.  Removing it, once again do not have any real
legal value while still within GPL 'usage boundaries'.

If the party that is accused of breaching GPL however did also
remove the GPL_ONLY symbols, it does once again have no legal
implication, except maybe enforcing a case of 'look, his intent
was from day one to breach GPL'.  It is however not binding
legally, and its worth will depend on the country, legal system
and so on.

> > If
> > someone creates a work and its found to be derivative and they didnt
> > make it GPL compatible they get sued, thats also not an additional
> > restriction its what the GPL says anyway.
> 
> 	Show me where the GPL says you have to GPL derived works that you don't
> distribute. That restriction is found nowhere in the GPL and if you
> attempted to impose such a restriction, it would be an additional one.
> 

I do not see why point you want to make.  If you do _NOT_ distribute
modified versions of the kernel, or works based on it, wtf worry ?
If you however do (hello, driver derived from kernel source/examples,
etc), you are bound by GPL (section 2a) to also distribute it under
GPL, and thus also the sources, which is exactly what manufactures
doing binary only drivers do not do.

> > That is the whole point of EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL, it doesn't enforce
> > anything and Linus was absolutely specific it should not do the
> > enforcing. Its a hint and a support filter.
> 
> 	If it doesn't enforce anything and isn't a license restriction, then it's
> perfectly legal and kosher to remove it.
> 

Yes, didn't Alan just say it does not enforce anything?

What it does though do, what the whole idea behind it is, is if
party A, say do a binary driver, and they changed EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL
to EXPORT_SYMBOL, then the kernel devs will _not_ support party A,
as Alan said with 'Its a hint and a support filter.'.  Sure, you
are free to remove it, but if you do, do not expect any support.

The company I work for is a supplier of PC components.  We have
the same type of support 'safety system' build in - we do not have
the infrastructure to support the public masses, thus we sell at
low prices to vendors that have a much higher markup, and good
support.  If then somebody come to us, that is not a dealer, or
do not have an Invoice, sorry sir, go to who you bought it from.
Its basically the same thing if you think about it.

Can we now stop this, or could you continue this in private if
you still choose not to understand?


Thanks,

-- 
Martin Schlemmer



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-12 21:17         ` David Schwartz
@ 2003-09-15 18:24           ` Timothy Miller
  2003-09-15 20:17             ` David Schwartz
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: Timothy Miller @ 2003-09-15 18:24 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Schwartz; +Cc: Pascal Schmidt, linux-kernel



David Schwartz wrote:

> 
> 	This is a publication restriction, not a usage restriction. Your phrasing
> above is like saying, "you can't put bullets into a gun that you use to
> shoot a police officer". The restriction is on the shooting, not the
> loading.

Are you saying that publishing a program does not constitute a "usage" 
of the program and/or its source code?



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* RE: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-15 18:24           ` Timothy Miller
@ 2003-09-15 20:17             ` David Schwartz
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: David Schwartz @ 2003-09-15 20:17 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Timothy Miller; +Cc: Pascal Schmidt, linux-kernel


> David Schwartz wrote:

> > 	This is a publication restriction, not a usage restriction.
> > Your phrasing
> > above is like saying, "you can't put bullets into a gun that you use to
> > shoot a police officer". The restriction is on the shooting, not the
> > loading.

> Are you saying that publishing a program does not constitute a "usage"
> of the program and/or its source code?

	No, I'm saying that publishing a program is not *just* a usage of the
program. You can have full usage rights to a program and not be able to
publish it because publication requires granting rights to other people,
which is not use.

	Similarly, I can give you full rights to use my house but you still can't
sell my house. That's not because "selling" isn't a way of "using", it's
because selling is "using and then some". The additional thing that
distribution has that usage doesn't is the ability to grant rights to
others.

	The GPL is quite clear on this point:

"Activities other than copying, distribution and modification are not
covered by this License; they are outside its scope.  The act of
running the Program is not restricted, and the output from the Program
is covered only if its contents constitute a work based on the
Program (independent of having been made by running the Program).
Whether that is true depends on what the Program does."

	When you distribute a copyrighted work, you are not just distributing the
physical work but you are also conveying at last some rights of usage to
other people. Conveying rights of usage is legally distinct from having
rights of usage.

	Unrestricted use does not mean you can do whatever you please so long as it
somehow involves usage, it just means that the restrictions aren't upon the
usage itself. So anything that is *just* usage is okay. Anything that is
usage and something else is okay so long as the something else is okay. You
can have full unrestricted use of my bat and you still can't use it to beat
a stranger, but that's because you couldn't use anything to beat a stranger,
not because you don't have full use of the bat.

	Distribution is usage and something else. The something else being the
conveying of usage rights to others. If you have unrestricted use, you can
still only distribute if you have the rights to the something else.

	DS



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-09-15  5:57                                     ` Erik Andersen
  2003-09-15  6:14                                       ` Nick Piggin
@ 2003-10-05  0:52                                       ` Rob Landley
  2003-10-05  1:05                                         ` Larry McVoy
  2003-10-05  6:40                                         ` Andre Hedrick
  1 sibling, 2 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Rob Landley @ 2003-10-05  0:52 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: andersen, Henning P. Schmiedehausen, Andre Hedrick; +Cc: linux-kernel

On Monday 15 September 2003 00:57, Erik Andersen wrote:
> On Mon Sep 15, 2003 at 12:17:37AM +0000, Henning P. Schmiedehausen wrote:
> > Erik Andersen <andersen@codepoet.org> writes:
> > >When you are done making noise, please explain how a closed
> > >source binary only product that runs within the context of the
> > >Linux kernel is not a derivitive work and therefore not subject
> > >to the terms of the GPL, per the definition given in the kernel
> > >COPYING file that grants you your limited rights for copying,
> > >distribution and modification.
> >
> > "Because Linus said so".
>
> It does not say "Because Linus said so" in the Linux kernel
> COPYING file, which is the only official document that grants
> legal permission to copy, distribute and/or modify the kernel.

Linus clearly and publicly stated his position on binary only kernel modules 
almost exactly one year ago:

http://groups.google.com/groups?selm=Pine.LNX.4.44.0210170958340.6739-100000%40home.transmeta.com.lucky.linux.kernel

He basically said there IS no module exception to the GPL, it's just a 
question of what is and is not a derived work.

The kernel developers have marked up portions of the API to indicate "we 
consider anything that needs to access this deeply internal bit to be a 
derived work, hence subject to the GPL".  That's what GPL_ONLY _means_.  
Needing to re-export that therefore opens you up to a lawsuit.  (Whether you 
can defend yourself in court from that lawsuit is always an open question, 
but by adding GPL_ONLY markup the developers made their intent much more 
clear, which is unlikely to help you convince a judge of your interpretation 
if you explicitly undo that markup and then claim the license doesn't apply 
to you...)

Here's the relevant section of the above posting from Linus:

-----

I will re-iterate my stance on the GPL and kernel modules:

  There is NOTHING in the kernel license that allows modules to be 
  non-GPL'd. 

  The _only_ thing that allows for non-GPL modules is copyright law, and 
  in particular the "derived work" issue. A vendor who distributes non-GPL 
  modules is _not_ protected by the module interface per se, and should 
  feel very confident that they can show in a court of law that the code 
  is not derived.

  The module interface has NEVER been documented or meant to be a GPL 
  barrier. The COPYING clearly states that the system call layer is such a 
  barrier, so if you do your work in user land you're not in any way 
  beholden to the GPL. The module interfaces are not system calls: there 
  are system calls used to _install_ them, but the actual interfaces are
  not.

  The original binary-only modules were for things that were pre-existing 
  works of code, ie drivers and filesystems ported from other operating 
  systems, which thus could clearly be argued to not be derived works, and 
  the original limited export table also acted somewhat as a barrier to 
  show a level of distance.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-10-05  0:52                                       ` Rob Landley
@ 2003-10-05  1:05                                         ` Larry McVoy
  2003-10-05  2:34                                           ` viro
  2003-10-05 10:23                                           ` David Woodhouse
  2003-10-05  6:40                                         ` Andre Hedrick
  1 sibling, 2 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Larry McVoy @ 2003-10-05  1:05 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Rob Landley
  Cc: andersen, Henning P. Schmiedehausen, Andre Hedrick, linux-kernel

On Sat, Oct 04, 2003 at 07:52:09PM -0500, Rob Landley wrote:
> On Monday 15 September 2003 00:57, Erik Andersen wrote:
> > On Mon Sep 15, 2003 at 12:17:37AM +0000, Henning P. Schmiedehausen wrote:
> > > Erik Andersen <andersen@codepoet.org> writes:
> > > >When you are done making noise, please explain how a closed
> > > >source binary only product that runs within the context of the
> > > >Linux kernel is not a derivitive work and therefore not subject
> > > >to the terms of the GPL, per the definition given in the kernel
> > > >COPYING file that grants you your limited rights for copying,
> > > >distribution and modification.
> > >
> > > "Because Linus said so".
> >
> > It does not say "Because Linus said so" in the Linux kernel
> > COPYING file, which is the only official document that grants
> > legal permission to copy, distribute and/or modify the kernel.
> 
> Linus clearly and publicly stated his position on binary only kernel modules 
> almost exactly one year ago:

Yeah, but Linus stating his position about a license doesn't mean diddly.
The kernel is licensed under a license, that license is a contract that
people enter into.  To the extent that it is enforceable, that license
determines what happens, Linus can't retroactively decide to interpret
the license a different way.  The license can't enforce things which
the law doesn't allow.  In particular, the law understands a concept of
a boundary.  And Linus' comments notwithstanding, modules are a pretty
clear boundary.  Even the GPL acks this, it knows that anything which
is clearly separable is not covered.
-- 
---
Larry McVoy              lm at bitmover.com          http://www.bitmover.com/lm

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-10-05  1:05                                         ` Larry McVoy
@ 2003-10-05  2:34                                           ` viro
  2003-10-05  3:45                                             ` Larry McVoy
  2003-10-05 10:23                                           ` David Woodhouse
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: viro @ 2003-10-05  2:34 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Larry McVoy, Rob Landley, andersen, Henning P. Schmiedehausen,
	Andre Hedrick, linux-kernel

On Sat, Oct 04, 2003 at 06:05:21PM -0700, Larry McVoy wrote:
> 
> Yeah, but Linus stating his position about a license doesn't mean diddly.
> The kernel is licensed under a license, that license is a contract that
> people enter into.  To the extent that it is enforceable, that license
> determines what happens, Linus can't retroactively decide to interpret
> the license a different way.  The license can't enforce things which
> the law doesn't allow.  In particular, the law understands a concept of
> a boundary.  And Linus' comments notwithstanding, modules are a pretty
> clear boundary.  Even the GPL acks this, it knows that anything which
> is clearly separable is not covered.

Oh, for fuck sake!  Larry, grep the damn tree for EXPORT_SYMBOL.  And
count them.  _IF_ it would be a relatively sane set of primitives - sure,
no arguments.  It's not.  Nowhere near that.

Conversions from EXPORT_SYMBOL to EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL are noise.  Why?
Because at any point any exported symbol can disappear.  Period.  For
some of them it's less likely, for some - more, but there was no promise
to preserve that set.  Ever.  Look at them and you will see why - if
we promise to keep all that pile present and working as it used to, we've
got a pitchfork stuck in the kernel guts.

Yes, it would be nice if there was something at least resembling an API.
Get the export list to shrink by 1.5 orders of magnitude and we might
have something to talk about.  That, and get the situation to the point
where additions to the export list would have to be defended - not granted
whenever somebody says "I wanna".  Until then there's no boundary at all.

Right now modules can call _anything_.  Look through the history and you'll
see patches that not only added an export but removed static at the same
chunk.  And you know what?  The guys who would like to pretend that there
is a boundary are the same guys who had destroyed it.  It used to be much
smaller list of exported objects.  Guess who had been pushing for its expansion
until it had lost any semblance of controlled interface?

When additions to interface start happening without any review and without
any percieved need to even explain why you need to add this, this and that -
it stops being an interface.  It's true for any project, not just the kernel.

And I'll bet you anything - if you try to get the damn thing back into shape,
authors of said modules will be out for blood.

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-10-05  2:34                                           ` viro
@ 2003-10-05  3:45                                             ` Larry McVoy
  2003-10-05 10:24                                               ` David Woodhouse
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: Larry McVoy @ 2003-10-05  3:45 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: viro
  Cc: Larry McVoy, Rob Landley, andersen, Henning P. Schmiedehausen,
	Andre Hedrick, linux-kernel

On Sun, Oct 05, 2003 at 03:34:28AM +0100, viro@parcelfarce.linux.theplanet.co.uk wrote:
> On Sat, Oct 04, 2003 at 06:05:21PM -0700, Larry McVoy wrote:
> > 
> > Yeah, but Linus stating his position about a license doesn't mean diddly.
> > The kernel is licensed under a license, that license is a contract that
> > people enter into.  To the extent that it is enforceable, that license
> > determines what happens, Linus can't retroactively decide to interpret
> > the license a different way.  The license can't enforce things which
> > the law doesn't allow.  In particular, the law understands a concept of
> > a boundary.  And Linus' comments notwithstanding, modules are a pretty
> > clear boundary.  Even the GPL acks this, it knows that anything which
> > is clearly separable is not covered.
> 
> Oh, for fuck sake!  Larry, grep the damn tree for EXPORT_SYMBOL.  And
> count them.  _IF_ it would be a relatively sane set of primitives - sure,
> no arguments.  It's not.  Nowhere near that.

You're missing what the law sees as a boundary.  It's really simple,
as far as I can tell, and it doesn't matter how many symbols there are
or are not.  If you can pull out one wad of code and drop in another
and everything works as before then that is a boundary.

A great example of this is a device driver.  Again, I'm not a lawyer
although I've spent a fair amount of time discussing this topic with
lawyers, but it sure seems like that an objective judge would say that
the GPL cannot cross the device driver boundary.

People get all worked up over this but when they do then they should
also claim that system calls are not a boundary either.

By the way, I have no personal or business desire to argue this one way
or the other, I'm not trying to make money off of something like a driver
linked with the kernel or anything remotely similar.  All I'm doing is
telling you what I understand to be the law.  You can do with it what
you will but don't shoot the messenger (or at least don't expect me to
change my tune when you do).
-- 
---
Larry McVoy              lm at bitmover.com          http://www.bitmover.com/lm

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-10-05  0:52                                       ` Rob Landley
  2003-10-05  1:05                                         ` Larry McVoy
@ 2003-10-05  6:40                                         ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-10-05  7:39                                           ` viro
  2003-10-05 18:27                                           ` David Woodhouse
  1 sibling, 2 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Andre Hedrick @ 2003-10-05  6:40 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Rob Landley; +Cc: Henning P. Schmiedehausen, linux-kernel


You are so young and fresh to the game, it is cute.

http://www.gcom.com/home/support/whitepapers/linux-gnu-license.html

Try doing a little more checking of your history Rob.

The position was set in 1995 and to many who objected let it unchallanged.
Now regardless if you knew of this information or not when you entered
into kernel development, tough!  I did not know about it and have to suck
it up that binary modules are permitted, period.  So if other people can
make money, then I will too, and encourage others to persue also.

If you want to try and strike with the iron is cold bring a lunch.
Otherwise bring your lawyers when I publish freed_symbols and will eat
your lame position for a snack and spit it out because of bad taste.

Tell me I can not publish a GPL w/ source code project which returns the
original API's to their normal place in history, and I will show you that
I can still draw the string on a bow.

Tell anyone they can not change anything they want in the kernel, and you
impose a restriction and you lose your right to use by the terms of the
license called GPL.  Funny how the other side of the sword is ignored
even when it is splitting your forehead wide open.

So have a nice day.

Andre Hedrick
LAD Storage Consulting Group

On Sat, 4 Oct 2003, Rob Landley wrote:

> On Monday 15 September 2003 00:57, Erik Andersen wrote:
> > On Mon Sep 15, 2003 at 12:17:37AM +0000, Henning P. Schmiedehausen wrote:
> > > Erik Andersen <andersen@codepoet.org> writes:
> > > >When you are done making noise, please explain how a closed
> > > >source binary only product that runs within the context of the
> > > >Linux kernel is not a derivitive work and therefore not subject
> > > >to the terms of the GPL, per the definition given in the kernel
> > > >COPYING file that grants you your limited rights for copying,
> > > >distribution and modification.
> > >
> > > "Because Linus said so".
> >
> > It does not say "Because Linus said so" in the Linux kernel
> > COPYING file, which is the only official document that grants
> > legal permission to copy, distribute and/or modify the kernel.
> 
> Linus clearly and publicly stated his position on binary only kernel modules 
> almost exactly one year ago:
> 
> http://groups.google.com/groups?selm=Pine.LNX.4.44.0210170958340.6739-100000%40home.transmeta.com.lucky.linux.kernel
> 
> He basically said there IS no module exception to the GPL, it's just a 
> question of what is and is not a derived work.
> 
> The kernel developers have marked up portions of the API to indicate "we 
> consider anything that needs to access this deeply internal bit to be a 
> derived work, hence subject to the GPL".  That's what GPL_ONLY _means_.  
> Needing to re-export that therefore opens you up to a lawsuit.  (Whether you 
> can defend yourself in court from that lawsuit is always an open question, 
> but by adding GPL_ONLY markup the developers made their intent much more 
> clear, which is unlikely to help you convince a judge of your interpretation 
> if you explicitly undo that markup and then claim the license doesn't apply 
> to you...)
> 
> Here's the relevant section of the above posting from Linus:
> 
> -----
> 
> I will re-iterate my stance on the GPL and kernel modules:
> 
>   There is NOTHING in the kernel license that allows modules to be 
>   non-GPL'd. 
> 
>   The _only_ thing that allows for non-GPL modules is copyright law, and 
>   in particular the "derived work" issue. A vendor who distributes non-GPL 
>   modules is _not_ protected by the module interface per se, and should 
>   feel very confident that they can show in a court of law that the code 
>   is not derived.
> 
>   The module interface has NEVER been documented or meant to be a GPL 
>   barrier. The COPYING clearly states that the system call layer is such a 
>   barrier, so if you do your work in user land you're not in any way 
>   beholden to the GPL. The module interfaces are not system calls: there 
>   are system calls used to _install_ them, but the actual interfaces are
>   not.
> 
>   The original binary-only modules were for things that were pre-existing 
>   works of code, ie drivers and filesystems ported from other operating 
>   systems, which thus could clearly be argued to not be derived works, and 
>   the original limited export table also acted somewhat as a barrier to 
>   show a level of distance.
> 



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-10-05  6:40                                         ` Andre Hedrick
@ 2003-10-05  7:39                                           ` viro
  2003-10-05 18:27                                           ` David Woodhouse
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: viro @ 2003-10-05  7:39 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andre Hedrick; +Cc: Rob Landley, Henning P. Schmiedehausen, linux-kernel

On Sat, Oct 04, 2003 at 11:40:22PM -0700, Andre Hedrick wrote:
> 
> Tell me I can not publish a GPL w/ source code project which returns the
> original API's to their normal place in history, and I will show you that
> I can still draw the string on a bow.

_What_ original API?  I agree that silent adding _GPL to existing symbol
is obnoxious and warrants a patch that would revert the change.

However, if tomorrow the exported function disappears completely - tough
luck.  Nobody had ever promised to keep this "API" unchanged.  It's not
that it had been changed just for kicks (after all, you get to do changes
in a bunch of in-tree drivers are such change), but such changes had happened
and will happen.  And there's nothing you can do about that.

And folks, let's be honest.  Sturgeon was an optimist.  Way more than 90%
of code is crap.  The only way around that is to have a bunch of creatively
sadistic bastards go through said code and rip the authors a new one for
every hole they find (and yes, that includes ripping new ones to each other).

Judging by the vendor drivers that doesn't happen.  I don't care why that
doesn't happen - be it "they'll buy it anyway" or "we have no resources"
or "it's rude to the people who had done the original work" or "what do
you mean, review?".  Whatever.  Unless I have very good reasons to believe
that particular piece of code had been done right, crap it is.  Plain and
simple statistics.

Code from unknown programmers presumably written to unknown specifications
that had presumably passed unknown QA by unknown reviewers and testers with
unknown results and then had been shipped with unknown amount of pressure
exerted by sales?  Geez...  What a wonderful reason to assume that it would
be better than average...

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-10-05  1:05                                         ` Larry McVoy
  2003-10-05  2:34                                           ` viro
@ 2003-10-05 10:23                                           ` David Woodhouse
  2003-10-05 11:32                                             ` David Lang
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: David Woodhouse @ 2003-10-05 10:23 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Larry McVoy
  Cc: Rob Landley, andersen, Henning P. Schmiedehausen, Andre Hedrick,
	linux-kernel

On Sat, 2003-10-04 at 18:05 -0700, Larry McVoy wrote:
> Yeah, but Linus stating his position about a license doesn't mean diddly.
> The kernel is licensed under a license, that license is a contract that
> people enter into.  To the extent that it is enforceable, that license
> determines what happens, Linus can't retroactively decide to interpret
> the license a different way.  The license can't enforce things which
> the law doesn't allow.  In particular, the law understands a concept of
> a boundary. 

I agree. Linus' comments on the matter, except of course his original
exception for userspace which has been there since 1993, are an
irrelevant _interpretation_.

All that is relevant is the meaning of the original licence.

>  And Linus' comments notwithstanding, modules are a pretty
> clear boundary.  Even the GPL acks this, it knows that anything which
> is clearly separable is not covered.

This statement is in conflict with the presence of the exception for
userspace which precedes the text of the GPL in the Linux COPYING file.

The presence of the exception makes it clear that, without such
exception, userspace would have been considered to be a derived work in
the terminology of the original licence. Otherwise, the exception would
of course have been redundant.

If userspace would be considered a derived work without explicit
exception, then so are kernel modules. They have no such explicit
exception, and are hence not permitted.

I'll grant you that Linus' witterings in public on the matter would
probably prevent him _personally_ from bringing suit against a
distributor of binary-only modules, on the principle of equitable
estoppel.

That doesn't stop me or anyone else from doing so though.

-- 
dwmw2



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-10-05  3:45                                             ` Larry McVoy
@ 2003-10-05 10:24                                               ` David Woodhouse
  2003-10-05 13:56                                                 ` Larry McVoy
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: David Woodhouse @ 2003-10-05 10:24 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Larry McVoy
  Cc: viro, Rob Landley, andersen, Henning P. Schmiedehausen,
	Andre Hedrick, linux-kernel

On Sat, 2003-10-04 at 20:45 -0700, Larry McVoy wrote:
> People get all worked up over this but when they do then they should
> also claim that system calls are not a boundary either.

The first paragraph of the COPYING file makes it entirely clear that
system calls were not considered to be such a boundary.

-- 
dwmw2



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-10-05 10:23                                           ` David Woodhouse
@ 2003-10-05 11:32                                             ` David Lang
  2003-10-05 13:37                                               ` David Woodhouse
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: David Lang @ 2003-10-05 11:32 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Woodhouse
  Cc: Larry McVoy, Rob Landley, andersen, Henning P. Schmiedehausen,
	Andre Hedrick, linux-kernel

On Sun, 5 Oct 2003, David Woodhouse wrote:

> The presence of the exception makes it clear that, without such
> exception, userspace would have been considered to be a derived work in
> the terminology of the original licence. Otherwise, the exception would
> of course have been redundant.
>
> If userspace would be considered a derived work without explicit
> exception, then so are kernel modules. They have no such explicit
> exception, and are hence not permitted.

no, all the presence of the userspace exception means is that someone
attempted to make the claim that you would only be allowed to run GPL
software on a GPL kernel and Linus wanted to make it absolutly clear that
that wasn't the case.

trying to claim otherwise, even without a specific 'userspace exception'
is along the same lines as what SCO is doing, (anything that ever ran on
the same box as Sys V is part of SysV)

why do people realize how stupid this argument when SCO makes it, but
somehow when it's made on behalf of the GPL it somehow seems sane?

as got the GPL_only stuff, I am seriously worried about people defining
something and then declaring that anything that uses it in any way must be
a derived work, that there is no other legitimate way to use it. how many
people would buy this argument if it was being made about some function in
a piece of hardware? (i.e., if you use this function on this 802.11 card
then your software is obviously a derivitive of our driver so we get all
the rights to it)

David Lang

-- 
"Debugging is twice as hard as writing the code in the first place.
Therefore, if you write the code as cleverly as possible, you are,
by definition, not smart enough to debug it." - Brian W. Kernighan

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-10-05 11:32                                             ` David Lang
@ 2003-10-05 13:37                                               ` David Woodhouse
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: David Woodhouse @ 2003-10-05 13:37 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Lang
  Cc: Larry McVoy, Rob Landley, andersen, Henning P. Schmiedehausen,
	Andre Hedrick, linux-kernel

On Sun, 2003-10-05 at 04:32 -0700, David Lang wrote:
> why do people realize how stupid this argument when SCO makes it, but
> somehow when it's made on behalf of the GPL it somehow seems sane?

The distinction to be drawn here is between that which is allowed for by
copyright law, and that which is not.

Let us briefly assume, for the sake of argument, that the Linux kernel
was released under the Creosote Public Licence, a licence which requires
each licensee to perform a daily ritual of bathing in creosote, and to
release _all_ future work, even unrelated work, of his own under the
same licence.

If you don't like the terms of the CPL, you have the option of not using
the work in question.

If you use the work, however, you are bound by those terms. 

Let us assume, also merely for the sake of argument, that you can
produce a kernel module which is not so closely tied to the kernel that
it would be considered a derivative work in copyright law.

However, the CPL under which the kernel is released still requires that
you release this work under the CPL, even though under copyright law it
is not a derivative work.

You still have the same choice you had before. You may accept the
licence of the Linux kernel, continue to perform your daily bathing in
creosote and release your new work under the appropriate licence -- or
you may decline the licence of the Linux kernel and refrain from using
it at all.

If you take the latter option, then you may perform no testing on your
binary module, since that would require use of the Linux kernel. You may
use the Linux kernel nowhere within your organisation.

In this situation, it's not just about your module itself being an
infringing copy of a copyright work, but your copy of the Linux kernel
_itself_ being an infringing copy.

Obviously the GNU General Public License makes no mention of creosote,
and its use with the Linux kernel does not require that you license
_all_ future work under the GPL. 

I have made a statement about my opinion of what the licence of the
Linux kernel _does_ in fact require. It is my belief that the author of
the GNU General Public License is in agreement with me. 

In particular, in this case, I think the presence of the userspace
exception makes it _very_ clear that the meaning of 'derived work' would
otherwise have included both userspace and loadable modules. 

Obviously this is neither true or false until the matter is settled in a
court; it's all conjecture. But I think a court will agree with me.

>  how many people would buy this argument if it was being made about some 
> function in a piece of hardware? (i.e., if you use this function on this 
> 802.11 card then your software is obviously a derivitive[sic] of our driver 
> so we get all the rights to it)

I'd buy the _argument_, even if the licence were to require the ritual
sacrifice of my first-born child. I wouldn't buy the card in question
and use that function though. I have that choice.

If I _did_ choose to use the function in question, I would not then
whinge that it's not fair when they come for my first-born. That was the
agreement I entered into, after all.

-- 
dwmw2



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-10-05 10:24                                               ` David Woodhouse
@ 2003-10-05 13:56                                                 ` Larry McVoy
  2003-10-05 14:14                                                   ` David Woodhouse
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: Larry McVoy @ 2003-10-05 13:56 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Woodhouse
  Cc: Larry McVoy, viro, Rob Landley, andersen,
	Henning P. Schmiedehausen, Andre Hedrick, linux-kernel

On Sun, Oct 05, 2003 at 11:24:36AM +0100, David Woodhouse wrote:
> On Sat, 2003-10-04 at 20:45 -0700, Larry McVoy wrote:
> > People get all worked up over this but when they do then they should
> > also claim that system calls are not a boundary either.
> 
> The first paragraph of the COPYING file makes it entirely clear that
> system calls were not considered to be such a boundary.

You're forgetting that what the GPL says doesn't matter if it is
unenforceable.  Remember all the people yelling at me that they can
reverse engineer BK in spite of any no-reverse-engineering clauses?
That same logic applies to the GPL, you can't have it both ways.

It doesn't matter what you think, or I think, or Linus thinks.  What
matters is what is legal and what isn't.  
-- 
---
Larry McVoy              lm at bitmover.com          http://www.bitmover.com/lm

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-10-05 13:56                                                 ` Larry McVoy
@ 2003-10-05 14:14                                                   ` David Woodhouse
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: David Woodhouse @ 2003-10-05 14:14 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Larry McVoy
  Cc: viro, Rob Landley, andersen, Henning P. Schmiedehausen,
	Andre Hedrick, linux-kernel

On Sun, 2003-10-05 at 06:56 -0700, Larry McVoy wrote:
> You're forgetting that what the GPL says doesn't matter if it is
> unenforceable. 

If the licence is invalid then there exists no licence and it is an
offence to use the software in question at _all_.

>  Remember all the people yelling at me that they can
> reverse engineer BK in spite of any no-reverse-engineering clauses?
> That same logic applies to the GPL, you can't have it both ways.

I wasn't doing that yelling.

> It doesn't matter what you think, or I think, or Linus thinks.  What
> matters is what is legal and what isn't. 

Agreed.
 
-- 
dwmw2



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-10-05  6:40                                         ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-10-05  7:39                                           ` viro
@ 2003-10-05 18:27                                           ` David Woodhouse
  2003-10-05 19:21                                             ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-10-05 19:32                                             ` Maciej Zenczykowski
  1 sibling, 2 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: David Woodhouse @ 2003-10-05 18:27 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andre Hedrick; +Cc: Rob Landley, Henning P. Schmiedehausen, linux-kernel

On Sat, 2003-10-04 at 23:40 -0700, Andre Hedrick wrote:
> You are so young and fresh to the game, it is cute.
> 
> http://www.gcom.com/home/support/whitepapers/linux-gnu-license.html

That's quite amusingly erroneous. The idea that you could use the Linux
kernel having stripped out all code belonging to Alan so that his
opinion is not relevant is one that I find frankly hilarious.

This is not about your work just being a derived work of Alan's under
copyright law. This is about you not complying to the licence under
which Alan's code is released and hence it is _his_ code, including I
believe a significant part of the networking code, which is an
'infringing copy of a copyright work' in law; since you use it without
licence.

-- 
dwmw2



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-10-05 18:27                                           ` David Woodhouse
@ 2003-10-05 19:21                                             ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-10-05 20:03                                               ` David Woodhouse
  2003-10-05 19:32                                             ` Maciej Zenczykowski
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: Andre Hedrick @ 2003-10-05 19:21 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Woodhouse; +Cc: Rob Landley, Henning P. Schmiedehausen, linux-kernel


David,

It is about the fact that Linus on his own set a position that modules are
permitted.  Now if you want to take the position that one can not modify
and redistribute the modified kernel in source, you are imposing a
restriction.  One is free to add or subtract content and redistribute.
Combine this with the position that modules are permitted regardless and
there is no copyright issue.

If I wanted to be rude, I could take the changes I made and copyright the
combined work and make it so others could not use that version without
permission.  This is exactly what the large distributions do with their
product.  Surprized, don't be it is all a stupid game of no you can't and
yes I can.

So when should I expect your letter ?

How will you phrase the content given "freed_symbols" will be GPL ?

How will you attack any vendor using it ?

As the author of the GPL code, I will show that I can still pull a bow
string.  If I use it for whatever reason or combine it into any kernel I
distribute as source where are your issues?  You have none.

This is all a game of who is peeing in whose soup.

Neither you or I can do anything, provide the vendor who is using Linux
publishes their source fork.  I also dare you to stop them, because you
can't.

Cheers, and keep up the joust!

Andre


Andre Hedrick
LAD Storage Consulting Group

On Sun, 5 Oct 2003, David Woodhouse wrote:

> On Sat, 2003-10-04 at 23:40 -0700, Andre Hedrick wrote:
> > You are so young and fresh to the game, it is cute.
> > 
> > http://www.gcom.com/home/support/whitepapers/linux-gnu-license.html
> 
> That's quite amusingly erroneous. The idea that you could use the Linux
> kernel having stripped out all code belonging to Alan so that his
> opinion is not relevant is one that I find frankly hilarious.
> 
> This is not about your work just being a derived work of Alan's under
> copyright law. This is about you not complying to the licence under
> which Alan's code is released and hence it is _his_ code, including I
> believe a significant part of the networking code, which is an
> 'infringing copy of a copyright work' in law; since you use it without
> licence.
> 
> -- 
> dwmw2
> 
> 


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-10-05 18:27                                           ` David Woodhouse
  2003-10-05 19:21                                             ` Andre Hedrick
@ 2003-10-05 19:32                                             ` Maciej Zenczykowski
  2003-10-05 19:47                                               ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-10-05 19:54                                               ` Arjan van de Ven
  1 sibling, 2 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Maciej Zenczykowski @ 2003-10-05 19:32 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Woodhouse
  Cc: Andre Hedrick, Rob Landley, Henning P. Schmiedehausen, linux-kernel

> You are so young and fresh to the game, it is cute.
> 
> http://www.gcom.com/home/support/whitepapers/linux-gnu-license.html

Can a module even be considered LGPL?  After all a module interfaces with
the kernel via including files from the kernel source - doesn't this
automatically mean that it is a derived work of at least a few of the
kernel headers (the module specific ones for example).  These headers
contribute code to the module as well: INC_MOD_USE_COUNT and the like...
And since the kernel is GPLed doesn't this mean that the entire module is
GPLed?

On the other hand any running program on linux dynamically links (via 
syscalls) against the kernel... I think everyone agrees that dynamically 
linking against the kernel in this manner should be allowed and not a 
violation of the GPL of the kernel source...



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-10-05 19:32                                             ` Maciej Zenczykowski
@ 2003-10-05 19:47                                               ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-10-05 20:38                                                 ` David Woodhouse
  2003-10-05 19:54                                               ` Arjan van de Ven
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: Andre Hedrick @ 2003-10-05 19:47 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Maciej Zenczykowski
  Cc: David Woodhouse, Rob Landley, Henning P. Schmiedehausen, linux-kernel


Usage of the kernel headers only, is using the effective API for that
snapshot.  It is clear in many copyright cases under the terms of fair use
and reverse engineering to obtain operational functionality is legal and
upheld.

Touching or using copied C-code is fatal.

Reading the C-code and creating another work which is identical in
functionality and completely original, it is not derived regardless what
anybody thinks or tells you.  GPL only protects the actual file or
document.  It is a total waste on protecting the content expressed.

People confuse the two, and must admit I did so in the past.

Cheers,

Andre Hedrick
LAD Storage Consulting Group

On Sun, 5 Oct 2003, Maciej Zenczykowski wrote:

> > You are so young and fresh to the game, it is cute.
> > 
> > http://www.gcom.com/home/support/whitepapers/linux-gnu-license.html
> 
> Can a module even be considered LGPL?  After all a module interfaces with
> the kernel via including files from the kernel source - doesn't this
> automatically mean that it is a derived work of at least a few of the
> kernel headers (the module specific ones for example).  These headers
> contribute code to the module as well: INC_MOD_USE_COUNT and the like...
> And since the kernel is GPLed doesn't this mean that the entire module is
> GPLed?
> 
> On the other hand any running program on linux dynamically links (via 
> syscalls) against the kernel... I think everyone agrees that dynamically 
> linking against the kernel in this manner should be allowed and not a 
> violation of the GPL of the kernel source...
> 
> 
> -
> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
> the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
> More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
> Please read the FAQ at  http://www.tux.org/lkml/
> 


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-10-05 19:32                                             ` Maciej Zenczykowski
  2003-10-05 19:47                                               ` Andre Hedrick
@ 2003-10-05 19:54                                               ` Arjan van de Ven
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Arjan van de Ven @ 2003-10-05 19:54 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Maciej Zenczykowski
  Cc: David Woodhouse, Andre Hedrick, Rob Landley,
	Henning P. Schmiedehausen, linux-kernel

[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 613 bytes --]

On Sun, 2003-10-05 at 21:32, Maciej Zenczykowski wrote:
> 
> On the other hand any running program on linux dynamically links (via 
> syscalls) against the kernel... I think everyone agrees that dynamically 
> linking against the kernel in this manner should be allowed and not a 
> violation of the GPL of the kernel source...

"linking" is a bit tricky here. Traditionally linking involves resolving
addresses of symbols from the other part; system calls don't have any of
this, they are hard coded, documented and fixed numbers... numbers that
also work on BSD and AIX (in the linux personality).


[-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part --]
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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-10-05 19:21                                             ` Andre Hedrick
@ 2003-10-05 20:03                                               ` David Woodhouse
  2003-10-05 20:14                                                 ` Andre Hedrick
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: David Woodhouse @ 2003-10-05 20:03 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andre Hedrick; +Cc: Rob Landley, Henning P. Schmiedehausen, linux-kernel

On Sun, 2003-10-05 at 12:21 -0700, Andre Hedrick wrote:
> David,
> 
> It is about the fact that Linus on his own set a position that modules are
> permitted. 

It is indeed. And about that fact that by the time he made that
declaration, he was not in a position to make it unilaterally.


>  Now if you want to take the position that one can not modify
> and redistribute the modified kernel in source, you are imposing a
> restriction.

A restriction in this case which I assert was present in the original
licence; not an 'additional restriction'.

If I wanted to distribute my code without restrictions, I'd have
contributed to a BSD kernel, or released my code under the terms 
"GPL but not if you really really don't fancy it".

I don't. I didn't.

> If I wanted to be rude, I could take the changes I made and copyright the
> combined work and make it so others could not use that version without
> permission. 

Not without being in violation of the original licence. This isn't about
the resulting combined work, but about your permission to use the
_original_.

> Neither you or I can do anything, provide the vendor who is using Linux
> publishes their source fork.  I also dare you to stop them, because you
> can't.

Believe me, there are ways this can be achieved.
 
-- 
dwmw2


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-10-05 20:03                                               ` David Woodhouse
@ 2003-10-05 20:14                                                 ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-10-05 20:34                                                   ` David Woodhouse
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: Andre Hedrick @ 2003-10-05 20:14 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Woodhouse; +Cc: Rob Landley, Henning P. Schmiedehausen, linux-kernel


On Sun, 5 Oct 2003, David Woodhouse wrote:

> On Sun, 2003-10-05 at 12:21 -0700, Andre Hedrick wrote:
> > David,
> > 
> > It is about the fact that Linus on his own set a position that modules are
> > permitted. 
> 
> It is indeed. And about that fact that by the time he made that
> declaration, he was not in a position to make it unilaterally.

Regardless, nobody stopped him at that time and thus a right of way has
been granted and can not be revoked.

> 
> >  Now if you want to take the position that one can not modify
> > and redistribute the modified kernel in source, you are imposing a
> > restriction.
> 
> A restriction in this case which I assert was present in the original
> licence; not an 'additional restriction'.

See above, the boss changed the rules and nobody challanged it.
It sticks like glue and we all have to suck up the point and move forward.

> If I wanted to distribute my code without restrictions, I'd have
> contributed to a BSD kernel, or released my code under the terms 
> "GPL but not if you really really don't fancy it".
> 
> I don't. I didn't.
> 
> > If I wanted to be rude, I could take the changes I made and copyright the
> > combined work and make it so others could not use that version without
> > permission. 
> 
> Not without being in violation of the original licence. This isn't about
> the resulting combined work, but about your permission to use the
> _original_.
> 
> > Neither you or I can do anything, provide the vendor who is using Linux
> > publishes their source fork.  I also dare you to stop them, because you
> > can't.
> 
> Believe me, there are ways this can be achieved.

Sure, and I am out there proving the points that will undermine your
arguements.

Whatever happened to "World Domination" according to TUX ?
Whatever happened to 'having a choice' ?

Lets assume you are correct, and the effect is a "Tar Baby".

Your claims that anything which loads into a kernel is automatically a
derived work.  Thus the effect of an original work loading into a gpl work
force the original work to be GPL.  This is a joke and will never see a
second in any court.

Cheers,

Andre

For those who do not know about history and english archers, go read.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-10-05 20:14                                                 ` Andre Hedrick
@ 2003-10-05 20:34                                                   ` David Woodhouse
  2003-10-05 20:43                                                     ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-10-06  1:22                                                     ` Larry McVoy
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: David Woodhouse @ 2003-10-05 20:34 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andre Hedrick; +Cc: Rob Landley, Henning P. Schmiedehausen, linux-kernel

On Sun, 2003-10-05 at 13:14 -0700, Andre Hedrick wrote:
> Regardless, nobody stopped him at that time and thus a right of way has
> been granted and can not be revoked.

Wrong. While Linus' statement does bar him from personally suing you, it
doesn't stop anyone else.

> See above, the boss changed the rules and nobody challanged it.

He did not have authority, by that time, to change the rules. Neither
was he unchallenged.

> Whatever happened to "World Domination" according to TUX ?
> Whatever happened to 'having a choice' ?

You do have a choice. You can use software under the terms of the
licence under which it's released, or you can choose not to use it.

> Lets assume you are correct, and the effect is a "Tar Baby".
> 
> Your claims that anything which loads into a kernel is automatically a
> derived work.  Thus the effect of an original work loading into a gpl work
> force the original work to be GPL.  This is a joke and will never see a
> second in any court.

You really aren't paying attention, are you? Your copyright (or lack of
it as a derivative work) on your own module is largely irrelevant to my
argument.

The GPL says you may use the kernel _itself_ but only with certain
restrictions.

My claim is that the GPL forbids you from loading a non-GPL'd module.
Not that if you do so, the non-GPL'd module becomes a derived work, but
that in doing do you are violating the licence under which you received
the _kernel_ and hence you must immediately cease using the _kernel_.

Just like if the GPL required you to bathe in creosote daily and one day
you forgot.

I repeat, for the hard of understanding:

I am not asserting that if you manage to produce a loadable module which
a court would rule is not a derivative work, you would not be allowed to
distribute that.

I am asserting that if you do so, you are disobeying the restrictions on
your use of the kernel itself, and hence you would not be able to use
the kernel. You could use your own module, but not the Linux kernel.

-- 
dwmw2



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-10-05 19:47                                               ` Andre Hedrick
@ 2003-10-05 20:38                                                 ` David Woodhouse
  2003-10-05 20:46                                                   ` Andre Hedrick
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: David Woodhouse @ 2003-10-05 20:38 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andre Hedrick
  Cc: Maciej Zenczykowski, Rob Landley, Henning P. Schmiedehausen,
	linux-kernel

On Sun, 2003-10-05 at 12:47 -0700, Andre Hedrick wrote:
> Reading the C-code and creating another work which is identical in
> functionality and completely original, it is not derived regardless what
> anybody thinks or tells you.  GPL only protects the actual file or
> document. 

...and continues to do so. So if the licence of the original says you
may use it only if you do not create such a work of your own, then as
soon as you create your own, you lose your right to continue to use the
original.

-- 
dwmw2



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-10-05 20:34                                                   ` David Woodhouse
@ 2003-10-05 20:43                                                     ` Andre Hedrick
  2003-10-06  1:22                                                     ` Larry McVoy
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Andre Hedrick @ 2003-10-05 20:43 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Woodhouse; +Cc: Rob Landley, Henning P. Schmiedehausen, linux-kernel


Will give you your point, regardless that is is wrong.

If loading a NON-GPL module is in violation of the license then enforce
the license to prevent one from loading.

Legally you can not, thus the license for which you claim is in violation,
violates itself.  Restriction of usage.

Well the right-of-way is now there little chance of it being taken back.

GPL sucks as a general license, yet it was the best thing going at the
time.  It has a means to prevent us from moving forward to migrate to a
better license.

Cheers,

Andre Hedrick
LAD Storage Consulting Group

On Sun, 5 Oct 2003, David Woodhouse wrote:

> On Sun, 2003-10-05 at 13:14 -0700, Andre Hedrick wrote:
> > Regardless, nobody stopped him at that time and thus a right of way has
> > been granted and can not be revoked.
> 
> Wrong. While Linus' statement does bar him from personally suing you, it
> doesn't stop anyone else.
> 
> > See above, the boss changed the rules and nobody challanged it.
> 
> He did not have authority, by that time, to change the rules. Neither
> was he unchallenged.
> 
> > Whatever happened to "World Domination" according to TUX ?
> > Whatever happened to 'having a choice' ?
> 
> You do have a choice. You can use software under the terms of the
> licence under which it's released, or you can choose not to use it.
> 
> > Lets assume you are correct, and the effect is a "Tar Baby".
> > 
> > Your claims that anything which loads into a kernel is automatically a
> > derived work.  Thus the effect of an original work loading into a gpl work
> > force the original work to be GPL.  This is a joke and will never see a
> > second in any court.
> 
> You really aren't paying attention, are you? Your copyright (or lack of
> it as a derivative work) on your own module is largely irrelevant to my
> argument.
> 
> The GPL says you may use the kernel _itself_ but only with certain
> restrictions.
> 
> My claim is that the GPL forbids you from loading a non-GPL'd module.
> Not that if you do so, the non-GPL'd module becomes a derived work, but
> that in doing do you are violating the licence under which you received
> the _kernel_ and hence you must immediately cease using the _kernel_.
> 
> Just like if the GPL required you to bathe in creosote daily and one day
> you forgot.
> 
> I repeat, for the hard of understanding:
> 
> I am not asserting that if you manage to produce a loadable module which
> a court would rule is not a derivative work, you would not be allowed to
> distribute that.
> 
> I am asserting that if you do so, you are disobeying the restrictions on
> your use of the kernel itself, and hence you would not be able to use
> the kernel. You could use your own module, but not the Linux kernel.
> 
> -- 
> dwmw2
> 
> 


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-10-05 20:38                                                 ` David Woodhouse
@ 2003-10-05 20:46                                                   ` Andre Hedrick
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Andre Hedrick @ 2003-10-05 20:46 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Woodhouse
  Cc: Maciej Zenczykowski, Rob Landley, Henning P. Schmiedehausen,
	linux-kernel


Use maybe but read nope.

Now you have crossed the line in GPL, where you have restricted usaged.

You lose :-P

Cheers,

Andre Hedrick
LAD Storage Consulting Group

On Sun, 5 Oct 2003, David Woodhouse wrote:

> On Sun, 2003-10-05 at 12:47 -0700, Andre Hedrick wrote:
> > Reading the C-code and creating another work which is identical in
> > functionality and completely original, it is not derived regardless what
> > anybody thinks or tells you.  GPL only protects the actual file or
> > document. 
> 
> ...and continues to do so. So if the licence of the original says you
> may use it only if you do not create such a work of your own, then as
> soon as you create your own, you lose your right to continue to use the
> original.
> 
> -- 
> dwmw2
> 
> 


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-10-05 20:34                                                   ` David Woodhouse
  2003-10-05 20:43                                                     ` Andre Hedrick
@ 2003-10-06  1:22                                                     ` Larry McVoy
  2003-10-06  1:37                                                       ` David Lang
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: Larry McVoy @ 2003-10-06  1:22 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Woodhouse
  Cc: Andre Hedrick, Rob Landley, Henning P. Schmiedehausen, linux-kernel

On Sun, Oct 05, 2003 at 09:34:40PM +0100, David Woodhouse wrote:
> The GPL says you may use the kernel _itself_ but only with certain
> restrictions.
> 
> My claim is that the GPL forbids you from loading a non-GPL'd module.
> Not that if you do so, the non-GPL'd module becomes a derived work, but
> that in doing do you are violating the licence under which you received
> the _kernel_ and hence you must immediately cease using the _kernel_.

Your claim is not, as far as I know, supported by the law or the GPL
itself.

GPL v2 section 2:
    "These requirements apply to the modified work as a whole.
    If identifiable sections of that work are not derived from the
    Program, and can be reasonably considered independent and separate
    works in themselves, then this License, and its terms, do not apply"

That leaves the question of what "can be reasonably considered independent
and separate works".  I've both heard about other companies researching
this and I've done it myself.  The lawyers came to the same conclusion,
independently.  In software, what constitutes an independent work is
something which can be pulled out and have another implementation dropped
in and the rest of the system can't tell the difference.

A very obvious boundary is user vs kernel, nobody here thinks that because
some application runs on a GPLed kernel that application is GPLed.
Some people here may _pretend_ they think that so that they can argue
that Linus made an "exception" for user land applications but that's
just self serving posturing and I'm sure those people know that (just
as I'm sure there will be 50 flaming replies saying that is not at all
what they think.  Politicians are the same everywhere).

Another boundary is a tarball.  If it weren't for the above clause of
the GPL then anything combined in a tarball with a GPLed work would be
considered GPLed.  Even RMS knew that wouldn't fly.

A less obvious boundary, and the one that got me into this, is the storage
of a GPLed source file in a source management system.  Does that mean that
the metadata used to store that file is GPLed?  At one point I was worried
about this (why?  Damn good question, in retrospect it is a "don't care",
I didn't create the metadata so I don't own it anyway so why do I care if
it is GPLed or not?  Whatever, at one point I cared).  I spent more than
a lot of you make in a year in legal fees looking into it and that's where 
I learned about boundaries.  The law has pretty clear ideas about boundaries
and it doesn't matter what you think or I think or the GPL thinks, the
boundaries are there and the GPL can't cross them.  The conclusion of the
lawyers was that no, putting a GPLed file into an SCM system in no way 
makes the SCM metadata GPLed.  BTW, I asked RMS about this and he of course
refused to accept that, his position is that the metadata would be GPLed,
nice to see he is consistent :)

A much more obvious example than the SCM one is a device driver or a module.
That's so cut and dried it isn't even open to debate in the eyes of the 
law.  It's a hard and fast boundary, the GPL can't cross it no matter what
people think or want (on either side).

That's why I think that your claim is not supported, by the GPL or
(far more importantly) the law.  While I'm no lawyer I'm perhaps more
qualified than some people on this list since I've actually spent a pile
of money researching this.  I'm sure that someone with more money could
buy^H^H^Hpay some lawyers try and make an opposing view stick but I'm
equally sure that those of you without money don't have an iceballs'
chance in hell of making an opposing view stick.  Talk is cheap, legal
decisions are expensive.

Once again, please note that I don't make money off the kernel or any other
GPLed product (we ship diff & patch with BK but we also provide source for
all our changes, they aren't substantial nor are they money makers).  So I
have no vested interest in which way this works out.  I'm simply passing on
what I've learned, I'm more or less one of you who has actually spent a lot
of money getting legal opinions on the topic.
-- 
---
Larry McVoy              lm at bitmover.com          http://www.bitmover.com/lm

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-10-06  1:22                                                     ` Larry McVoy
@ 2003-10-06  1:37                                                       ` David Lang
  2003-10-06  1:51                                                         ` Larry McVoy
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: David Lang @ 2003-10-06  1:37 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Larry McVoy
  Cc: David Woodhouse, Andre Hedrick, Rob Landley,
	Henning P. Schmiedehausen, linux-kernel

not to disagree with Larry in what he posted below, but there is nothing
in what he says that at all means that if you paste in code from one side
of a barrier to the other side the result doesn't need to be GPL'd

so the barriers can be delibratly bridged, but if you are careful about
your code on one side of the barrier you don't have to worry about what's
on the other side.

David Lang

On Sun, 5 Oct 2003, Larry McVoy wrote:

> Date: Sun, 5 Oct 2003 18:22:12 -0700
> From: Larry McVoy <lm@bitmover.com>
> To: David Woodhouse <dwmw2@infradead.org>
> Cc: Andre Hedrick <andre@linux-ide.org>, Rob Landley <rob@landley.net>,
>      Henning P. Schmiedehausen <hps@intermeta.de>,
>      linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org
> Subject: Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
>
> On Sun, Oct 05, 2003 at 09:34:40PM +0100, David Woodhouse wrote:
> > The GPL says you may use the kernel _itself_ but only with certain
> > restrictions.
> >
> > My claim is that the GPL forbids you from loading a non-GPL'd module.
> > Not that if you do so, the non-GPL'd module becomes a derived work, but
> > that in doing do you are violating the licence under which you received
> > the _kernel_ and hence you must immediately cease using the _kernel_.
>
> Your claim is not, as far as I know, supported by the law or the GPL
> itself.
>
> GPL v2 section 2:
>     "These requirements apply to the modified work as a whole.
>     If identifiable sections of that work are not derived from the
>     Program, and can be reasonably considered independent and separate
>     works in themselves, then this License, and its terms, do not apply"
>
> That leaves the question of what "can be reasonably considered independent
> and separate works".  I've both heard about other companies researching
> this and I've done it myself.  The lawyers came to the same conclusion,
> independently.  In software, what constitutes an independent work is
> something which can be pulled out and have another implementation dropped
> in and the rest of the system can't tell the difference.
>
> A very obvious boundary is user vs kernel, nobody here thinks that because
> some application runs on a GPLed kernel that application is GPLed.
> Some people here may _pretend_ they think that so that they can argue
> that Linus made an "exception" for user land applications but that's
> just self serving posturing and I'm sure those people know that (just
> as I'm sure there will be 50 flaming replies saying that is not at all
> what they think.  Politicians are the same everywhere).
>
> Another boundary is a tarball.  If it weren't for the above clause of
> the GPL then anything combined in a tarball with a GPLed work would be
> considered GPLed.  Even RMS knew that wouldn't fly.
>
> A less obvious boundary, and the one that got me into this, is the storage
> of a GPLed source file in a source management system.  Does that mean that
> the metadata used to store that file is GPLed?  At one point I was worried
> about this (why?  Damn good question, in retrospect it is a "don't care",
> I didn't create the metadata so I don't own it anyway so why do I care if
> it is GPLed or not?  Whatever, at one point I cared).  I spent more than
> a lot of you make in a year in legal fees looking into it and that's where
> I learned about boundaries.  The law has pretty clear ideas about boundaries
> and it doesn't matter what you think or I think or the GPL thinks, the
> boundaries are there and the GPL can't cross them.  The conclusion of the
> lawyers was that no, putting a GPLed file into an SCM system in no way
> makes the SCM metadata GPLed.  BTW, I asked RMS about this and he of course
> refused to accept that, his position is that the metadata would be GPLed,
> nice to see he is consistent :)
>
> A much more obvious example than the SCM one is a device driver or a module.
> That's so cut and dried it isn't even open to debate in the eyes of the
> law.  It's a hard and fast boundary, the GPL can't cross it no matter what
> people think or want (on either side).
>
> That's why I think that your claim is not supported, by the GPL or
> (far more importantly) the law.  While I'm no lawyer I'm perhaps more
> qualified than some people on this list since I've actually spent a pile
> of money researching this.  I'm sure that someone with more money could
> buy^H^H^Hpay some lawyers try and make an opposing view stick but I'm
> equally sure that those of you without money don't have an iceballs'
> chance in hell of making an opposing view stick.  Talk is cheap, legal
> decisions are expensive.
>
> Once again, please note that I don't make money off the kernel or any other
> GPLed product (we ship diff & patch with BK but we also provide source for
> all our changes, they aren't substantial nor are they money makers).  So I
> have no vested interest in which way this works out.  I'm simply passing on
> what I've learned, I'm more or less one of you who has actually spent a lot
> of money getting legal opinions on the topic.
> --
> ---
> Larry McVoy              lm at bitmover.com          http://www.bitmover.com/lm
> -
> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
> the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
> More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
> Please read the FAQ at  http://www.tux.org/lkml/
>

-- 
"Debugging is twice as hard as writing the code in the first place.
Therefore, if you write the code as cleverly as possible, you are,
by definition, not smart enough to debug it." - Brian W. Kernighan

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]]
  2003-10-06  1:37                                                       ` David Lang
@ 2003-10-06  1:51                                                         ` Larry McVoy
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Larry McVoy @ 2003-10-06  1:51 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Lang
  Cc: Larry McVoy, David Woodhouse, Andre Hedrick, Rob Landley,
	Henning P. Schmiedehausen, linux-kernel

On Sun, Oct 05, 2003 at 06:37:18PM -0700, David Lang wrote:
> not to disagree with Larry in what he posted below, but there is nothing
> in what he says that at all means that if you paste in code from one side
> of a barrier to the other side the result doesn't need to be GPL'd

Agreed.  If you are making a derived work, and pasting in stuff from a
GPLed source, your work is definitely derived and you are GPLed.  And I'd
be with everyone else ripping you a new one if you didn't GPL it.

I hope people understand that I respect the GPL and what it has accomplished.
It's a great thing.  People should not abuse it.  My comments which may seem
against that are legal in their basis, not my personal goals.
-- 
---
Larry McVoy              lm at bitmover.com          http://www.bitmover.com/lm

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* RE: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-12 20:58           ` Timothy Miller
                               ` (2 preceding siblings ...)
  2003-09-14  1:57             ` Erik Andersen
@ 2003-10-29 22:42             ` David Schwartz
  2003-10-29 23:11               ` David S. Miller
  2003-10-30  0:10               ` David Schwartz
  3 siblings, 2 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: David Schwartz @ 2003-10-29 22:42 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Timothy Miller; +Cc: Pascal Schmidt, linux-kernel


> David Schwartz wrote:

> But beyond this, there are some social issues.  If someone finds a way
> to work around this mechanism, they are breaking things to everyone
> else's detriment.  For a commercial entity to violate the GPL_ONLY
> barrier is an insult to kernel developers AND to their customers who
> will have trouble getting problems solved.

	While I understand this point of view, I do not share it. People
contributed to the Linux kernel project largely because it *was* an open
process. Nobody has the right to take offense when it's used for a different
reason than they had intended. If you want control over how your code is
used and modified, *don't* GPL it. If you're going to take offense when
people remove restrictions you impose, regardless of how much you like the
restrictions, *don't*' GPL it. It's that simple.

> So, if a company works around GPL_ONLY, are they violating the GPL
> license?  Probably not.  Does that make it OKAY?  Probably not.

	What's not okay is trying to inject your own rules on how GPL'd software
can be used. That's perhaps tolerable if you're the sole author. It's
condemnable when you're one among many.

> This is like finding a way to give a user space program access to kernel
> resources.  There are barriers put in place for a REASON because people
> make mistakes when they write software.  If no one did, we wouldn't have
> any need for memory protection, would we.

	Yet there is a project that removes all of these boundaries in the name of
improved performance for trusted applications. These are engineering
trade-offs and one of the good things about the GPL is that I'm not stuck,
by law or custom, when your engineering trade-offs if I don't think they
apply to me.

	DS



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-10-29 22:42             ` People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model] David Schwartz
@ 2003-10-29 23:11               ` David S. Miller
  2003-10-30  0:10               ` David Schwartz
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: David S. Miller @ 2003-10-29 23:11 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Schwartz; +Cc: miller, der.eremit, linux-kernel


Do not even _THINK_ about bringing this thread back to life.

I said weeks ago for this thread to end, and I really meant it.

Any more postings in this thread and the people who do it are going to
be removed from the lists.  This is the one and only warning.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* RE: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-10-29 22:42             ` People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model] David Schwartz
  2003-10-29 23:11               ` David S. Miller
@ 2003-10-30  0:10               ` David Schwartz
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: David Schwartz @ 2003-10-30  0:10 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Schwartz, Timothy Miller; +Cc: Pascal Schmidt, linux-kernel


	This message went through a time warp. Please don't reply to it.

	DS



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
       [not found] ` <fa.n3hqp6f.1rkg0ob@ifi.uio.no>
@ 2003-09-14  4:39   ` walt
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: walt @ 2003-09-14  4:39 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Andre Hedrick; +Cc: linux-kernel

Andre Hedrick wrote:
> Erik:
> 
> One more thing you forgot!
> 
> Before you run around ranting about DMCA and CPRM and making suttle legal
> threats.  Everyone here knows who put it on the line to gain control of
> technology to prevent Content Protection Recordable Media from covering
> the storage industry wide.  That is correct it was me...

Hi Andre,

I'm not a technical person but I've been following the linux-kernel list
for enough years to know who you are and approximately what you have
contributed to the open-source community.  Let me start by saying THANK
YOU!  I very much appreciate what you do for all of us.

I would like to help you in return, if I can.

I have tried my best for several years to understand your posts and I
simply cannot.  I want to understand you because I know you know you
have a great deal to offer -- but I just don't know what the fuck you
are talking about most of the time, no matter how many times I read
your posts.

Please don't be insulted, I beg you.  I don't mean to criticize in any
way, but I see that you need help with communication skills.  Many of
your posts in this mailing list probably are ignored simply because
very few people understand what you are trying to say.

I'm a married man so I understand how frustrating it is to have every
word misinterpreted.  But such frustration should not be necessary in
a technical forum like this one.  Anyone who can talk to a disk should
be able to talk to this crowd, but I think you need a wrapper for the
PMLI (Programmer Mailing List Interface).

I can't help feeling that a lot of your frustration is caused by
miscommunciation rather than real issues.

I hate to see you so frustrated and upset when your coronaries are at
risk!  Take your heart medication and hire a translator....please!
We are depending on you to be around for many more years.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
       [not found] ` <vq84.1P5.7@gated-at.bofh.it>
@ 2003-09-13 21:43   ` Pascal Schmidt
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Pascal Schmidt @ 2003-09-13 21:43 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Schwartz; +Cc: linux-kernel

On Sat, 13 Sep 2003 23:30:12 +0200, you wrote in linux.kernel:

>> If people put GPL_ONLY symbol exports in their code, that's their call
>> to make, is it not? It's their code and they're free to say "well, this
>> is my code, and if you use this symbol, I consider your stuff to be a
>> derived work". Once again it's up to the lawyers to decide whether
>> this has legal value or not.
> 	If it has legal value, then it's an additional restriction.

Derived works are already restricted (when it comes to distributing them,
otherwise none of this is relevant since you can easily locally make
all EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL be plain EXPORT_SYMBOL). It would be a restriction
on who gets to say what constitutes a derived work and what not - but
that is not governed by the GPL anyway but by the relevant local laws.

The GPL does not and cannot outrank the law. If the law were to say the
authors of a piece of code get to say what is a derived work and what
not, then so it is and nothing the GPL says can stand against it.

-- 
Ciao,
Pascal

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-13 14:18       ` Geert Uytterhoeven
@ 2003-09-13 17:58         ` Alan Cox
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Alan Cox @ 2003-09-13 17:58 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Geert Uytterhoeven
  Cc: Timothy Miller, David Schwartz, Pascal Schmidt, Linux Kernel Development

On Sad, 2003-09-13 at 15:18, Geert Uytterhoeven wrote:
> Unfortunately it seems to be almost impossible to design a license that forces
> you to play according to the rules of fair play, and doesn't have any
> loopholes or grey areas.

Fair play is awfully hard to define. Fair use likewise. Currently almost
all countries legal systems have a clear notion of "derived work", and
copyright (unlike patents) extends no further. That limits how far the
GPL can extend, but its the same line in the sand (well fuzzy patch in
the sand in truth) that stops a lot of other things you wouldnt like.
Which and what modules count as derivative works is a lawyer question
and not it seems a trivial one.

Patents do extend beyond just the derived work and since Linux contains
patented material with rights granted for GPL use as per the GPL(but not
for non GPL use) there is a murky area around modules and patents - one
example of the issues that raises being RTLinux.

Folks using binary modules may also find third party software licenses
invalid (eg the OpenMotif one)



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-13  9:08 Nicolas Mailhot
  2003-09-13  9:49 ` David Schwartz
@ 2003-09-13 17:16 ` Alan Cox
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Alan Cox @ 2003-09-13 17:16 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Nicolas Mailhot; +Cc: Linux Kernel Mailing List

On Sad, 2003-09-13 at 10:08, Nicolas Mailhot wrote:
> At some point Linus decreeted linking closed modules was ok with him
> (note this was done without consulting anyone, so others contributors
> could have objected - they did choose to release stuff under the gpl
> after all - but this being Linus they let it pass)

Other contributors objected at the time. Furthermore there is merging of
third party GPL code from bodies like the FSF who also object and didnt
submit their code themselves. 

> will be sued (people that link to symbols not GPL-ONLY could be sued too
> but everyone seems to have agreed to let it pass). Removing the software

No. Sorry its neccessary to keep correcting people here but I have no
intention of allowing anyone creating a derivative work to claim
estoppel when they get their arses kicked some years on. Their sole
defence is that the work is not derivative. In some cases I can believe
that could be a valid claim.

As to _GPL. Its primarily a way of ensuring people who mix binary code
in with their kernel in unsupportable ways are made aware of it, and so
we can all use filter rules to discard their bugs.

Some vendors do support certain third party binary modules in some
specific enterprise configurations, others don't. In the community case
the general rule is we don't.

Alan


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* RE: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-13  9:49 ` David Schwartz
@ 2003-09-13 14:37   ` Nicolas Mailhot
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Nicolas Mailhot @ 2003-09-13 14:37 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Schwartz; +Cc: linux-kernel

[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2571 bytes --]

Le sam 13/09/2003 à 11:49, David Schwartz a écrit :

[...]

> > To avoid rewriting history symbols that could be used in non-free
> > stuff previously are not GPL-ONLY. People that ignore the hint can and
> > will be sued (people that link to symbols not GPL-ONLY could be sued too
> > but everyone seems to have agreed to let it pass).
> 
> 	Sued for what? Violating a restriction that isn't part of the license?
> That's no more illegal than removing the security checks on 'mount'.

Sued for not infringing the software license, in this case the GPL. They
won't be sued for removing GPL_ONLY checks ; they won't even be sued for
using GPL_ONLY symbols. They will be sued for distributing a non-GPLed
derived work when the license forbids it.

A symbol is marked GPL-only :
1. when there is no bloody way it could be used in another work without
it being a derived work
2. when the author of the associated kernel code publicly stated he will
go after you if you do not respect the license.

All the software "workarounds" proposed are only ways to infringe
without getting a big red warning in the face. They do not change the
reality of the infraction per see.

> > Removing the software
> > GPL-ONLY checks or working around them has nothing to do with it - it
> > does not change the basic kernel license nor the stated intentions of
> > its authors to enforce it. Hiding a do-not-trespass sign does not give
> > you the right to do it (if you think so do a reality check).
> 
> 	Except that the GPL does not permit any usage restrictions.

There is no usage restriction - you have the code, you can remove the
checks if you want to. Unlike a license enforcement restriction you
won't be sued just for this.

Now the next step is usually to link a big fat closed module to your
modified kernel. And there you *will* be sued if you distribute the
resulting work (which pisses of some unethical corporations because the
sole way to do it legally is to have the end-user perform the operation,
and the end-user does not want to bother with it. ie its closes them
some markets unless they open up their stuff. Guess what ? You won't
find any people on this list cry for them).

I even suspect if you submit a patch to have GPL-ONLY a kernel build
option it will be accepted (provided it taints the whole kernel
probably). Distributions of course will never ship binaries build
without it, and appliance manufacturers that use it will be submitted to
heavy review, but that's already the case.

-- 
Nicolas Mailhot

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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-12 19:55     ` Timothy Miller
@ 2003-09-13 14:18       ` Geert Uytterhoeven
  2003-09-13 17:58         ` Alan Cox
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: Geert Uytterhoeven @ 2003-09-13 14:18 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Timothy Miller; +Cc: David Schwartz, Pascal Schmidt, Linux Kernel Development

On Fri, 12 Sep 2003, Timothy Miller wrote:
> David Schwartz wrote:
> You're stuck thinking about "law" and "rules".  I'm thinking instead 
> about "honor".

Indeed. The GPL may not be perfect, but IMHO the GPL is the only way to make
sure everyone plays the game according to the rules. I.e. I give you something,
you can use it, but please play according to the rules of fair play.

BSD may look OK, but it doesn't protect against people who don't (want to) play
according to the rules.

> The point of divergence is with regard to modules and the symbol 
> restrictions for non-GPL drivers.  Here is a gray area where the GPL may 
> not apply really.  These gray areas are where ethics and honor must come 
> into play.

I consider binary-only modules some kind of loophole to avoid playing according
to the rules of fair play.

Unfortunately it seems to be almost impossible to design a license that forces
you to play according to the rules of fair play, and doesn't have any
loopholes or grey areas.

Gr{oetje,eeting}s,

						Geert

--
Geert Uytterhoeven -- There's lots of Linux beyond ia32 -- geert@linux-m68k.org

In personal conversations with technical people, I call myself a hacker. But
when I'm talking to journalists I just say "programmer" or something like that.
							    -- Linus Torvalds


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* RE: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-13  9:08 Nicolas Mailhot
@ 2003-09-13  9:49 ` David Schwartz
  2003-09-13 14:37   ` Nicolas Mailhot
  2003-09-13 17:16 ` Alan Cox
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: David Schwartz @ 2003-09-13  9:49 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Nicolas Mailhot, linux-kernel


> "David Schwartz" wrote :

> [ sorry to interupt your flamewar but the amount of nonsence produced
> here  starts to irritate me ]

> | Who is sending these letters? Who has no respect for the GPL and seeks
> | to add additional restrictions?

> This is no additional restriction.
> Check your history. The linux kernel was always under the GPL, not the
> LGPL ie distributing stuff that links with the kernel means this stuff
> must be distributed under the gpl.

	Yes, *distributing* stuff that links with the kernel means this stuff must
be distributed under the GPL. Note that this is a restriction that only
kicks in when you distribute something. It places no restrictions on how you
can use derived works you don't distribute.

> At some point Linus decreeted linking closed modules was ok with him
> (note this was done without consulting anyone, so others contributors
> could have objected - they did choose to release stuff under the gpl
> after all - but this being Linus they let it pass)

	Right.

> At a later point however the scope of closed linking had grown so big
> people started saying enough is enough and GPL-ONLY was born with
> Linus's approval.

	Okay.

> It is not a licensing change. It's an hint the associated kernel symbols
> are not covered by Linus' previous informal exemption and full GPL rules
> apply.

	Fine, so long as it's not a license enforcement mechanism.

> To avoid rewriting history symbols that could be used in non-free
> stuff previously are not GPL-ONLY. People that ignore the hint can and
> will be sued (people that link to symbols not GPL-ONLY could be sued too
> but everyone seems to have agreed to let it pass).

	Sued for what? Violating a restriction that isn't part of the license?
That's no more illegal than removing the security checks on 'mount'.

> Removing the software
> GPL-ONLY checks or working around them has nothing to do with it - it
> does not change the basic kernel license nor the stated intentions of
> its authors to enforce it. Hiding a do-not-trespass sign does not give
> you the right to do it (if you think so do a reality check).

	Except that the GPL does not permit any usage restrictions.

> So please stop making horrified noises the GPL is being enforced in a
> GPL project. Don't you realise how ridiculous it is ?

	All of the GPL's restrictions kick in upon distribution. The GPL_ONLY
restrictions affect use even in the absence of distribution. Thus, the
GPL_ONLY stuff *cannot* be a license enforcement because what it enforces is
*not* part of the license. Anyone who distributed Linux claiming that it had
such a license restriction would be in violation of the GPL's prohibition
against distribution with additional restrictions. Can you please reply to
that specific argument?

	And this is not some whacko obsure legalistic argument. This is a
fundamental point. Many people who contributed to the Linux kernel
contributed *because* they believed in the GPL and felt assured that nobody,
not even Linus, could close the evolving works by putting usage restrictions
on it. You GPL a work because you want to keep not only the current code
open to unrestricted use but all future distributed derived works as well.
Nobody has the right to add new license restrictions beyond those present in
the GPL.

	DS



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
@ 2003-09-13  9:08 Nicolas Mailhot
  2003-09-13  9:49 ` David Schwartz
  2003-09-13 17:16 ` Alan Cox
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Nicolas Mailhot @ 2003-09-13  9:08 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-kernel

[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1755 bytes --]

"David Schwartz" wrote :

[ sorry to interupt your flamewar but the amount of nonsence produced
here  starts to irritate me ]

| Who is sending these letters? Who has no respect for the GPL and seeks
| to add additional restrictions?

This is no additional restriction.
Check your history. The linux kernel was always under the GPL, not the
LGPL ie distributing stuff that links with the kernel means this stuff
must be distributed under the gpl.

At some point Linus decreeted linking closed modules was ok with him
(note this was done without consulting anyone, so others contributors
could have objected - they did choose to release stuff under the gpl
after all - but this being Linus they let it pass)

At a later point however the scope of closed linking had grown so big
people started saying enough is enough and GPL-ONLY was born with
Linus's approval.

It is not a licensing change. It's an hint the associated kernel symbols
are not covered by Linus' previous informal exemption and full GPL rules
apply. To avoid rewriting history symbols that could be used in non-free
stuff previously are not GPL-ONLY. People that ignore the hint can and
will be sued (people that link to symbols not GPL-ONLY could be sued too
but everyone seems to have agreed to let it pass). Removing the software
GPL-ONLY checks or working around them has nothing to do with it - it
does not change the basic kernel license nor the stated intentions of
its authors to enforce it. Hiding a do-not-trespass sign does not give
you the right to do it (if you think so do a reality check).

So please stop making horrified noises the GPL is being enforced in a
GPL project. Don't you realise how ridiculous it is ?

-- 
Nicolas Mailhot

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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-10 20:34   ` David Schwartz
@ 2003-09-12 19:55     ` Timothy Miller
  2003-09-13 14:18       ` Geert Uytterhoeven
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: Timothy Miller @ 2003-09-12 19:55 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Schwartz; +Cc: Pascal Schmidt, linux-kernel



David Schwartz wrote:
>>But I have another point.  You are not dealing with a license here.  The
>>license is there to satisfy lawyers and make clear the INTENT of the
>>authors.  The keyword here is INTENT in that someone who has developed
>>something is telling you how they feel about the use of their work
>>which, under many circumstances, they could have chosen not to share
>>with you.  What you are dealing with is real people who have put an
>>incredible amount of time and effort into developing Linux.  Those
>>people, to whom you owe much respect for sharing their contributions,
>>have decided that their software should be used with certain
>>restrictions, that being the GPL.  If you abuse Linux, it is not the GPL
>>that you are insulting, but the people who developed Linux.
> 
> 
> 	In other words, information does not want to be free. You shouldn't use
> code the way you want to use it but the way the authors want you to use it.
> After all, they didn't have to give it to you if they didn't want to.

EXACTLY.  Fortunately in this case, the authors place few restrictions 
on your usage.  Indeed, the "restrictions" are more a matter of being 
nice to the people who made the stuff you're using.

You're stuck thinking about "law" and "rules".  I'm thinking instead 
about "honor".

One of the (unresolved) discussions I had with RMS involved the role of 
the author.  He believes that the user is more important than the 
author.  I believe the author is more important, because had the author 
not written what the user has, then the user would not have it! 
Actually, he partially agrees with me but does not feel that the author 
should be able to apply restrictions (IF the work is PUBLISHED).


> 	However, Richard Stallman does not agree with this view. It's his view that
> if the authors chose to give you the code, you can use it any way you want
> to, regardless of how the authors feel about that type of usage. This is why
> he created the GPL.

But it seems clear to me that the GPL places some very strong 
restrictions on your usage.  Those restrictions are that although your 
specific usage of the code doesn't matter, anything (published) that you 
derive from GPL work MUST also be published under GPL.

So my point is that when someone publishes something under GPL that you 
find useful, give respect to the person who wrote it by obeying the 
spirit of the license.  But it is not the license that is important as 
that the author chose to release his work under those terms.  People, 
not rules; honor, not law.

There are other licenses besides the GPL.  When authors release under 
those terms, you should respect those terms as well.  The thing that 
sets the GPL apart from, say, closed-source licensing is that the GPL is 
based on a system of honor, while proprietary systems can (and often do) 
become unfairly restrictive to the users.

> 
> 
>>So, the discussions about finding ways to make a non-GPL driver look
>>like a GPL driver and get away with it legally are all moot.  The reason
>>you should not violate this is because the architects of Linux do not
>>want you to.
> 
> 
> 	If you really believe that the Linux authors wished to continue to control
> how their code was used, you have to think that they were stupid to release
> the code under the GPL. After all, the whole point of the GPL is to prohibit
> such restrictions. The reason Linux is under the GPL is so that developers
> *can't* put restrictions on how the package can be used. That's the "open"
> in open source.

The restrictions they are applying are the only ones in the GPL.  It was 
smart for them to use the GPL because it is compatible with their 
wishes.  Follow the GPL not because the GPL is a copyright license, but 
because you are grateful for the efforts of those who published under GPL.

Furthermore, if someone publishes under GPL, and your insult them, they 
may become less willing to release under GPL, thereby limiting your 
ability to rip them off.

Also, just to be pedantic, because you mentioned RMS, "open source" and 
"free software" are not the same thing.

> 
>>If you choose to violate that, you are being unethical,
>>pure and simple.  Or more to the point, you're being an asshole to a lot
>>of hard-working people who have chosen to freely share their work with
>>you.
> 
> 
> 	The person who tries to put other people's GPL'd works under his license
> restrictions is the asshole. I have contributed code to the Linux kernel
> under the GPL license (bonus points to anyone who can find my 25 lines of
> code or so). It is nobody else's right to add code to my code and add usage
> restrictions to it. The GPL expressly forbids this.

And I completely agree with all of this.  I'm getting the feeling that 
you and I don't actually disagree on any of this.  :)

The point of divergence is with regard to modules and the symbol 
restrictions for non-GPL drivers.  Here is a gray area where the GPL may 
not apply really.  These gray areas are where ethics and honor must come 
into play.

> 
>>Since they are the authors and you are not, their feelings about
>>their softare are more important than yours.
> 
> 
> 	I'm just baffled. You don't seem to understand at all why the Linux kernel
> is organized under the GPL. It's precisely so that some developers can't
> hijack the project and encumber the growing source base with usage and
> distribution restrictions.

Which is precisely why those authors placed Linux under the GPL.  If 
they didn't like that, they would be working on proprietary OS's.  I'm 
saying that people should respect the authors by honoring the GPL.

> 
>>You may be able to screw
>>them over and get away with it -- people do that sort of thing all the
>>time -- but the fact that you may find a legal loophole doesn't make you
>>any less of an abject asshole.
> 
> 
> 	The asshole is the person who thinks that they have the right to change the
> express wishes of all the other contributors to the kernel who chose to
> contribute to a project that operates under the GPL license. The GPL license
> is about there being no restrictions on usage.

Well, aside from the "it must remain free clause" (which I interpret as 
an important restriction), I agree with you.  That is to say, the 
"contributor" who hijacks the work of other contributors is being 
dishonorable, because he is not respecting the other contributors.

> 
>>In short:  Be honorable.
> 
> 
> 	I am. The hijackers are not.

Agreed.



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* Re: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-10 14:59 ` People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model] Timothy Miller
  2003-09-10 20:34   ` David Schwartz
@ 2003-09-10 23:35   ` James Clark
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: James Clark @ 2003-09-10 23:35 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Timothy Miller, David Schwartz; +Cc: Pascal Schmidt, linux-kernel

In many ways the original intention of the debate was lost in the battle. 
There are a lot of zealots on both sides of the GPL debate - personally, my 
undertanding is that the GPL forbids usage restrictions, thus once you 
release code under the GPL you cannot control it. This seems especially 
important in a project, such as Linux, that has been collaboratively 
developmed by a whole community.

The original question was would a binary driver interface allow easier usage 
by 'normal' users with any compatible kernel (rather than specific versions) 
and perhaps simplify module development cycle? 

Would the performance hit involved be worth the potential 
compatibility/simplicity? 

A lot of people have, assumed that this is a call to arms for binary-only 
modules. This is not true although this type of change would make such things 
more common.

James


On Wednesday 10 Sep 2003 3:59 pm, Timothy Miller wrote:
> I'm still 1600 messages behind in reading the list, but I have spent
> enough time reading the discussion about GPL and drivers that I feel
> compelled to comment.  I don't intend to comment further because I don't
> want to contribute to a flamewar any more than this already will.  But I
> feel the need to defend those who contribute to Free Software against
> those who don't.
>
> The argument I have been reading has been centered around the idea of
> working around the GPL to support binary-only driver and various other
> things which are counter to the spirit of the GPL and Linux.  But
> someone who is trying to find a legal GPL loophole is not considering
> the root of the situation and that the GPL is an effect, not a cause.
>
> A point someone else made that I feel compelled to reiterate is that it
> is the nature of the Linux development model and the attitude of the
> developers which has made Linux what it is and has made you want to use it.
>
> But I have another point.  You are not dealing with a license here.  The
> license is there to satisfy lawyers and make clear the INTENT of the
> authors.  The keyword here is INTENT in that someone who has developed
> something is telling you how they feel about the use of their work
> which, under many circumstances, they could have chosen not to share
> with you.  What you are dealing with is real people who have put an
> incredible amount of time and effort into developing Linux.  Those
> people, to whom you owe much respect for sharing their contributions,
> have decided that their software should be used with certain
> restrictions, that being the GPL.  If you abuse Linux, it is not the GPL
> that you are insulting, but the people who developed Linux.
>
> The GPL_ONLY restriction for driver modules may seem unfair, but it is
> far from it.  There are both valid technical and philosophical reasons
> for working that way.  No one forces you to use Linux, and when you made
> the choice to use it, you are entering into a community with a specific
> philosophy.  You know that philosophy in advance, so when you discover
> that you have a restruction you don't like, you have no room to complain.
>
> As someone said, if you want to write drivers for a UNIX which does not
> have these restrictions, there are plenty of commercial UNIXes out there
> that you have to choose from.  The fact that they are perhaps less
> popular is one reason why Linux developers do not want to imitate them.
>
> So, the discussions about finding ways to make a non-GPL driver look
> like a GPL driver and get away with it legally are all moot.  The reason
> you should not violate this is because the architects of Linux do not
> want you to.  If you choose to violate that, you are being unethical,
> pure and simple.  Or more to the point, you're being an asshole to a lot
> of hard-working people who have chosen to freely share their work with
> you.  Since they are the authors and you are not, their feelings about
> their softare are more important than yours.  You may be able to screw
> them over and get away with it -- people do that sort of thing all the
> time -- but the fact that you may find a legal loophole doesn't make you
> any less of an abject asshole.
>
> In short:  Be honorable.
>
> -
> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
> the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
> More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
> Please read the FAQ at  http://www.tux.org/lkml/


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* RE: People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-10 14:59 ` People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model] Timothy Miller
@ 2003-09-10 20:34   ` David Schwartz
  2003-09-12 19:55     ` Timothy Miller
  2003-09-10 23:35   ` James Clark
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 102+ messages in thread
From: David Schwartz @ 2003-09-10 20:34 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Timothy Miller; +Cc: Pascal Schmidt, linux-kernel


> But I have another point.  You are not dealing with a license here.  The
> license is there to satisfy lawyers and make clear the INTENT of the
> authors.  The keyword here is INTENT in that someone who has developed
> something is telling you how they feel about the use of their work
> which, under many circumstances, they could have chosen not to share
> with you.  What you are dealing with is real people who have put an
> incredible amount of time and effort into developing Linux.  Those
> people, to whom you owe much respect for sharing their contributions,
> have decided that their software should be used with certain
> restrictions, that being the GPL.  If you abuse Linux, it is not the GPL
> that you are insulting, but the people who developed Linux.

	In other words, information does not want to be free. You shouldn't use
code the way you want to use it but the way the authors want you to use it.
After all, they didn't have to give it to you if they didn't want to.

	However, Richard Stallman does not agree with this view. It's his view that
if the authors chose to give you the code, you can use it any way you want
to, regardless of how the authors feel about that type of usage. This is why
he created the GPL.

> So, the discussions about finding ways to make a non-GPL driver look
> like a GPL driver and get away with it legally are all moot.  The reason
> you should not violate this is because the architects of Linux do not
> want you to.

	If you really believe that the Linux authors wished to continue to control
how their code was used, you have to think that they were stupid to release
the code under the GPL. After all, the whole point of the GPL is to prohibit
such restrictions. The reason Linux is under the GPL is so that developers
*can't* put restrictions on how the package can be used. That's the "open"
in open source.

> If you choose to violate that, you are being unethical,
> pure and simple.  Or more to the point, you're being an asshole to a lot
> of hard-working people who have chosen to freely share their work with
> you.

	The person who tries to put other people's GPL'd works under his license
restrictions is the asshole. I have contributed code to the Linux kernel
under the GPL license (bonus points to anyone who can find my 25 lines of
code or so). It is nobody else's right to add code to my code and add usage
restrictions to it. The GPL expressly forbids this.

> Since they are the authors and you are not, their feelings about
> their softare are more important than yours.

	I'm just baffled. You don't seem to understand at all why the Linux kernel
is organized under the GPL. It's precisely so that some developers can't
hijack the project and encumber the growing source base with usage and
distribution restrictions.

> You may be able to screw
> them over and get away with it -- people do that sort of thing all the
> time -- but the fact that you may find a legal loophole doesn't make you
> any less of an abject asshole.

	The asshole is the person who thinks that they have the right to change the
express wishes of all the other contributors to the kernel who chose to
contribute to a project that operates under the GPL license. The GPL license
is about there being no restrictions on usage.

> In short:  Be honorable.

	I am. The hijackers are not.

	DS



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

* People, not GPL  [was: Re: Driver Model]
  2003-09-04  3:01 Driver Model David Schwartz
@ 2003-09-10 14:59 ` Timothy Miller
  2003-09-10 20:34   ` David Schwartz
  2003-09-10 23:35   ` James Clark
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 102+ messages in thread
From: Timothy Miller @ 2003-09-10 14:59 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: David Schwartz; +Cc: Pascal Schmidt, linux-kernel

I'm still 1600 messages behind in reading the list, but I have spent 
enough time reading the discussion about GPL and drivers that I feel 
compelled to comment.  I don't intend to comment further because I don't 
want to contribute to a flamewar any more than this already will.  But I 
feel the need to defend those who contribute to Free Software against 
those who don't.

The argument I have been reading has been centered around the idea of 
working around the GPL to support binary-only driver and various other 
things which are counter to the spirit of the GPL and Linux.  But 
someone who is trying to find a legal GPL loophole is not considering 
the root of the situation and that the GPL is an effect, not a cause.

A point someone else made that I feel compelled to reiterate is that it 
is the nature of the Linux development model and the attitude of the 
developers which has made Linux what it is and has made you want to use it.

But I have another point.  You are not dealing with a license here.  The 
license is there to satisfy lawyers and make clear the INTENT of the 
authors.  The keyword here is INTENT in that someone who has developed 
something is telling you how they feel about the use of their work 
which, under many circumstances, they could have chosen not to share 
with you.  What you are dealing with is real people who have put an 
incredible amount of time and effort into developing Linux.  Those 
people, to whom you owe much respect for sharing their contributions, 
have decided that their software should be used with certain 
restrictions, that being the GPL.  If you abuse Linux, it is not the GPL 
that you are insulting, but the people who developed Linux.

The GPL_ONLY restriction for driver modules may seem unfair, but it is 
far from it.  There are both valid technical and philosophical reasons 
for working that way.  No one forces you to use Linux, and when you made 
the choice to use it, you are entering into a community with a specific 
philosophy.  You know that philosophy in advance, so when you discover 
that you have a restruction you don't like, you have no room to complain.

As someone said, if you want to write drivers for a UNIX which does not 
have these restrictions, there are plenty of commercial UNIXes out there 
that you have to choose from.  The fact that they are perhaps less 
popular is one reason why Linux developers do not want to imitate them.

So, the discussions about finding ways to make a non-GPL driver look 
like a GPL driver and get away with it legally are all moot.  The reason 
you should not violate this is because the architects of Linux do not 
want you to.  If you choose to violate that, you are being unethical, 
pure and simple.  Or more to the point, you're being an asshole to a lot 
of hard-working people who have chosen to freely share their work with 
you.  Since they are the authors and you are not, their feelings about 
their softare are more important than yours.  You may be able to screw 
them over and get away with it -- people do that sort of thing all the 
time -- but the fact that you may find a legal loophole doesn't make you 
any less of an abject asshole.

In short:  Be honorable.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 102+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2003-10-30  0:11 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 102+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed)
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
     [not found] <uess.1w0.9@gated-at.bofh.it>
     [not found] ` <ujV3.1uP.13@gated-at.bofh.it>
2003-09-10 21:52   ` People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model] Pascal Schmidt
2003-09-10 22:26     ` David Schwartz
2003-09-10 22:34       ` Pascal Schmidt
2003-09-11  1:35         ` David Schwartz
2003-09-11 13:30           ` Eric W. Biederman
2003-09-11 18:39             ` David Schwartz
2003-09-11 18:45               ` Mike Fedyk
2003-09-13 17:52                 ` Andre Hedrick
2003-09-13 23:54                   ` Erik Andersen
2003-09-13 17:34             ` Andre Hedrick
2003-09-14 10:55               ` Sean Estabrooks
2003-09-11 14:36           ` Alan Cox
2003-09-13 17:42             ` Andre Hedrick
2003-09-12 20:58           ` Timothy Miller
2003-09-12 21:47             ` Matt D. Robinson
2003-09-12 22:31               ` Alan Cox
2003-09-12 23:26                 ` David Schwartz
2003-09-13  0:29                   ` Matt D. Robinson
2003-09-13 17:42                     ` Alan Cox
2003-09-13  5:38                   ` jw schultz
2003-09-13 17:44                   ` Alan Cox
2003-09-13 18:19             ` Andre Hedrick
2003-09-13 20:01               ` Andre Hedrick
2003-09-13 23:17                 ` Andre Hedrick
2003-09-14  1:57             ` Erik Andersen
2003-09-14  2:40               ` Andre Hedrick
2003-09-14  3:42                 ` Erik Andersen
2003-09-14  3:36                   ` Andre Hedrick
2003-09-14  4:37                     ` Erik Andersen
2003-09-14  4:58                       ` freed_symbols [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]] Andre Hedrick
2003-09-14  5:39                         ` Erik Andersen
2003-09-14  5:32                           ` Andre Hedrick
2003-09-14  6:41                             ` Erik Andersen
2003-09-14  6:50                               ` Andre Hedrick
2003-09-14  7:10                               ` Andre Hedrick
2003-09-14  8:08                                 ` Erik Andersen
2003-09-15  0:17                                   ` Henning P. Schmiedehausen
2003-09-15  5:57                                     ` Erik Andersen
2003-09-15  6:14                                       ` Nick Piggin
2003-10-05  0:52                                       ` Rob Landley
2003-10-05  1:05                                         ` Larry McVoy
2003-10-05  2:34                                           ` viro
2003-10-05  3:45                                             ` Larry McVoy
2003-10-05 10:24                                               ` David Woodhouse
2003-10-05 13:56                                                 ` Larry McVoy
2003-10-05 14:14                                                   ` David Woodhouse
2003-10-05 10:23                                           ` David Woodhouse
2003-10-05 11:32                                             ` David Lang
2003-10-05 13:37                                               ` David Woodhouse
2003-10-05  6:40                                         ` Andre Hedrick
2003-10-05  7:39                                           ` viro
2003-10-05 18:27                                           ` David Woodhouse
2003-10-05 19:21                                             ` Andre Hedrick
2003-10-05 20:03                                               ` David Woodhouse
2003-10-05 20:14                                                 ` Andre Hedrick
2003-10-05 20:34                                                   ` David Woodhouse
2003-10-05 20:43                                                     ` Andre Hedrick
2003-10-06  1:22                                                     ` Larry McVoy
2003-10-06  1:37                                                       ` David Lang
2003-10-06  1:51                                                         ` Larry McVoy
2003-10-05 19:32                                             ` Maciej Zenczykowski
2003-10-05 19:47                                               ` Andre Hedrick
2003-10-05 20:38                                                 ` David Woodhouse
2003-10-05 20:46                                                   ` Andre Hedrick
2003-10-05 19:54                                               ` Arjan van de Ven
2003-09-14  8:45                                 ` Valdis.Kletnieks
2003-09-15  0:16                         ` Henning P. Schmiedehausen
2003-09-15  0:27                           ` Justin Cormack
2003-09-14 21:40                       ` People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model] David Schwartz
2003-09-15  8:06                 ` David S. Miller
2003-09-14  2:51               ` Andre Hedrick
2003-09-14  3:05               ` GPL == DMCA [Re: People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model]] Andre Hedrick
2003-10-29 22:42             ` People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model] David Schwartz
2003-10-29 23:11               ` David S. Miller
2003-10-30  0:10               ` David Schwartz
2003-09-11  1:39         ` David Schwartz
2003-09-13 17:11         ` Andre Hedrick
2003-09-13 21:11           ` Pascal Schmidt
2003-09-13 21:19             ` David Schwartz
2003-09-13 21:12               ` Andre Hedrick
2003-09-13 22:09               ` Alan Cox
2003-09-13 22:30                 ` David Schwartz
2003-09-14  1:16                   ` Andrew Pimlott
2003-09-15 15:26                   ` Martin Schlemmer
2003-09-13 23:00                 ` Andre Hedrick
2003-09-12 21:04       ` Timothy Miller
2003-09-12 21:17         ` David Schwartz
2003-09-15 18:24           ` Timothy Miller
2003-09-15 20:17             ` David Schwartz
2003-09-13 18:09         ` Andre Hedrick
     [not found] <fa.fq1hscm.1b7ai1k@ifi.uio.no>
     [not found] ` <fa.n3hqp6f.1rkg0ob@ifi.uio.no>
2003-09-14  4:39   ` walt
     [not found] <vpYm.1Bn.7@gated-at.bofh.it>
     [not found] ` <vq84.1P5.7@gated-at.bofh.it>
2003-09-13 21:43   ` Pascal Schmidt
2003-09-13  9:08 Nicolas Mailhot
2003-09-13  9:49 ` David Schwartz
2003-09-13 14:37   ` Nicolas Mailhot
2003-09-13 17:16 ` Alan Cox
  -- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
2003-09-04  3:01 Driver Model David Schwartz
2003-09-10 14:59 ` People, not GPL [was: Re: Driver Model] Timothy Miller
2003-09-10 20:34   ` David Schwartz
2003-09-12 19:55     ` Timothy Miller
2003-09-13 14:18       ` Geert Uytterhoeven
2003-09-13 17:58         ` Alan Cox
2003-09-10 23:35   ` James Clark

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