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GPL in Court - Good or Bad?

Irvu asks: "The Register has a lengthy opinion piece today about IBM's lawsuit, and the GPL. Barring a settlement this case will see the first test of the GPL in a court of law. Previously the GPL has functioned as a social contract with the implicit (albeit untested) force of law behind it. Any ruling now could radically alter the free-software/open-source landscape for good or ill. Andrew Orlowski dwells on these possible ills in his piece. What does Slashdot think? Is this test a good or bad thing? Do you have faith in the justice system (or IBM's Lawyers) to draw the right conclusions? And, how do you see any outcome affecting you?"

2 of 413 comments (clear)

  1. Courts rule software can be modified/redistributed by jamienk · · Score: 4, Funny

    August 11, 2003
    AP Wire
    In a surprise 6-3 decision today, the US Supreme Court has ruled that the GNU Public Lisense is not enforcable and that programmers, users, and sellers do not need copyright holders' permission in order to modify, copy, or redistribute any machine- or human- readable code.

    With IP law thus crippled, Free Software advocates expressed shock and confusion about how to proceed. "Now that I can just legally use a copy of NT with a cracked serial," Linux creator Linux Torvalds moaned in Washington, DC, "There doesn't seem much point..."

  2. Re:Either way it's a good thing by minusthink · · Score: 5, Funny

    "A legal test of the GPL is a good thing no matter how it turns out"

    I agree, as long I'm not paying for it.

    --
    "when life gets complicated, I like to take a nap in a tree and wait for dinner" - Hobbes.