Thread: Re: Response from MySql AB (Re: Humor me: Postgresql vs.

Re: Response from MySql AB (Re: Humor me: Postgresql vs.

From
"Dann Corbit"
Date:
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jonathan Bartlett [mailto:johnnyb@eskimo.com]
> Sent: Thursday, October 09, 2003 9:20 AM
> To: Andrew Sullivan
> Cc: pgsql-general@postgresql.org
> Subject: Re: Response from MySql AB (Re: [GENERAL] Humor me:
> Postgresql vs.
>
>
> > On Thu, Oct 09, 2003 at 08:52:36AM -0600, scott.marlowe wrote:
> > > Fact:  If you write your application to work with ODBC -> MySQL
> > > connectivity, you can write a closed source app and sell it for
> > > money and
> >
> > Fact: nobody's ever tested any of this in court, so you're
> basically
> > risking it.
>
> That's true of just about any software license.

Where is the risk with a Berkeley style license?

> > I think if people want legal advice about the status of
> MySQL's claims
> > about GPL, they'd best consult a lawyer who knows a lot
> about software
> > licenses.
>
> That's true of just about any software license.

Is it true of Berkeley style software licenses?  Is it true of the ACE
license or the Apache license?  Mozilla licenses?

Many open source licenses carry basically no risk at all.  Others
contain enormous risk.

Re: Response from MySql AB (Re: Humor me: Postgresql vs.

From
Christopher Browne
Date:
DCorbit@connx.com ("Dann Corbit") writes:
>> That's true of just about any software license.
>
> Where is the risk with a Berkeley style license?

... That AT&T might sue you for infringing on their UNIX code.

That this actually happened (albeit a long, long time ago) proves that
it is a risk that has been "observed in the wild," as opposed to
merely in peoples fevered imaginations.

Supposing the AT&T situation had been resolved more quickly, way back
when, then the population that were looking for a "free Unix" might
well have stampeded to *BSD instead of Linux.

Suppose then, that "FrobozzBSD" turned out to be "The Bees' Knees" in
public interest instead of Linux, and [IBM/SGI] had then dropped out
of Project Monterrey and contributed SMP/FileSystem code to
FrobozzBSD.

The scenario would be much the same as what we have recently seen,
albeit with different licenses involved.

If IBM gave code to FreeBSD that infringed on what SCO perceived as
"their rights," then much the same set of lawsuits would arise, for
much the same reasons.

When AT&T filed suit, it wasn't over which free software licenses were
being used.  When SCO filed suit, it wasn't over free software
licenses.

If someone contributed code to PostgreSQL that infringed on some
aspect of the "intellectual property" of
Oracle/Microsoft/Sybase/Whomever, it would be totally irrelevant what
license PostgreSQL uses.
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Christopher Browne
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