Settlement Reached in Verizon GPL Violation Suit
eldavojohn writes "A settlement has been reached in the Verizon GPLv2 violation suit. The now famous BusyBox developers, Erick Andersen and Rob Landley, will receive an undisclosed sum from subcontractor Actiontec Electronics. 'Actiontec supplied Verizon with wireless routers for its FiOS broadband service that use an open source program called BusyBox. BusyBox developers Andersen and Landley in December sued Verizon -- claiming that the usage violated terms of version 2 of the GNU General Public License.'"
How is this different from a pantent troll? Create a program, GPL it, wait for some company to use it, and sue?
Except in this case the license is *right there* in the code they used. Also, they weren't prevented from writing something functionally similar to BusyBox.
Basically, Patents != Copyrights.
IP is "Imaginary Property" that doesn't actually exist or have any laws on it.
If I have nothing to hide, don't search me
The difference is that these people actually put a lot of time and thought into *creating* something. They deserve all kinds of protection by law. A patent troll merely patents some obvious idea and sits there, but never creates anything.
Huge difference.
I agree that it's somewhat disappointing that they settled when you consider it as a lost opportunity to test the GPL in court, but hopefully the developers well *well* compensated for their trouble. Perhaps they'll donate a portion of their settlement proceeds to helping others fight these cases. How many "little guys" are out there who might have legitimate infringement claims, but are too scared or too broke to stand up to the legal muscle of a large corporation?
On a separate note, I just had to Digg this one. The more ways the news can get out about this, the better off the community as a whole is, and it increases visibility for the validity of the GPL. After all, if the case had no merit, why would a megacorp like Verizon settle? These stories need more exposure.
512 MB RAM, 20 GB disk, 200 GB transfer, five datacenters. $19.95/month.
Actually the software was free. The expensive part was hording the source code. So, the correct statement is "That was pretty expensive hording."
oholoh.net estimates the cost of developing the software at $2,446,697.
How we know is more important than what we know.
The lawsuit was "Erik Andersen and Rob Landley v. Verizon Communications Inc.", "case number 1:07-cv-11070-LTS, was filed December 6th, 2007, in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York". Actiontec may be paying an unspecified amount as part of the conditions of settlement, but don't think for a moment Verizon is guiltless in this matter. As they were engaging in the distribution of the infringing devices with Actiontec, they were certainly 50% responsible. If Verizon had thought they had any chance of winning the case, I guarantee you they would have dragged it out as far as possible. This settlement isn't as good as a jury endorsement of the GPL's validity, but it's pretty damn good nonetheless.
512 MB RAM, 20 GB disk, 200 GB transfer, five datacenters. $19.95/month.
You mean like this one?
http://www.ohloh.net/projects/4929/contributors
How we know is more important than what we know.