Stallman's Legacy Halts At Hardware (hackaday.com)
szczys writes: To say Richard Stallman had a profound effect on free software is not a bold enough statement. The power of the GPL, and his advocacy for software freedom have changed the world. But there is one frontier that has yet to hear this gospel. These days, no hardware is an island. Almost every type of electronics we use is running some type of code, and in almost every case some of that code is secret in more ways than one. From beefy processors to graphics controllers, boot ROMs and binary blobs run in the silicon we base our systems upon. The code is not published and in the rare case that you are able to view the source it is only under strict NDA. This represents one of the biggest barriers to true open hardware.
Nice trill, shill. GPL is by far the most popular license on the planet, and it's growing. Whaaa whaaa, BSD, whaaa whaa, MIT. Nope. GPL is the code you'll find in just about every non-Apple consumer electronics device; even though the manufacturers could take vanity-ware licensed projects and keep quiet about them. They don't, though. Wonder why?
If you want to steal another's code, and pass it off as your own, hunt out the substandard and abandoned BSD equivalents.