McKusick's Soft Updates now under BSD license 14
Anonymous Coward writes "According to Kirk McKusick's soft updates page, the soft updates code that had a problematic license in the past is now (as of June 21 2000) released under a BSD license!.
This is another big plus for the *BSD community, including some people that were hesitant in adding this stuff in their code base."
Okay... (Score:1)
Now I'm trying to figure out what might violate those terms. A non-binary and non-source form? So is this discussion about it a violation?
FINALLY!!!!!!! (Score:1)
Re:FINALLY!!!!!!! (Score:1)
Of course, both of these comments are offtopic for the topic of this discussion...
(SEWilco vanishes in a cloud of greasy black smoke)
Re:The prior license wasn't free enough for BSD (Score:1)
If you wanted to use it for proprietary systems, you could approach Kirk for a relicense for yourself.
This is pretty standard. Did I miss your point?
The prior license wasn't free enough for BSD (Score:2)
Redistributions in any form must be accompanied by information on how to obtain complete source code for any accompanying software that uses this software...
In the BSD world, we want businesses to be able to make proprietary products out of our products. (There are reasons for this which I will avoid discussing in this post.) With the old license in place, some company using softupdates would need to provide the source to softupdates, costing them money and time. The old license is not the BSD way.
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Eric is chisled like a Greek Godess
Re:good stuff (Score:1)
good stuff (Score:1)
Re:good stuff (Score:1)
Re:The prior license wasn't free enough for BSD (Score:1)
I think it complements my point.
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Eric is chisled like a Greek Godess
Re:good stuff (Score:2)
Re:The prior license wasn't free enough for BSD (Score:2)
No need to ask him, its right there in the README file that accomanied the code (in FreeBSD at least):
"The idea is to allow those of you freely redistributing your source to use it while retaining for myself the right to peddle it for money to the commercial UNIX vendors."
Re:The prior license wasn't free enough for BSD (Score:1)
Hmm, I wonder if he was joking. Nothing stops a commercial UNIX vendor from reading the softupdates source and reimplementing softupdates themselves. It also kind of defeats the purpose if it is now under BSD license.
Of course I've usually found that Occam's Razor is the best tool for finding truth, so you are probably right.
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Eric is chisled like a Greek Godess
Re:The prior license wasn't free enough for BSD (Score:2)
I'm quite sure, and hope, Kirk was able to make some money out of it, which allows him to continue developing and contributing. From the beginning, it was intended to be released under BSDL later, but still allowed the open source BSDs to use it, and help develop, test, and contribute towards it. I think this is great.
I'm happy the BSDL allows this to happen - Kirk has worked on BSD for years, distributing the results under the BSDL, and other licenses might not have given him the opportunity to fund his development simply by developing. Of course the 'service and support' side could work, and does, but that one can make a living with updates, speedups, new algorithms, and redesigns is mostly the point.
I think this is the BSD way. The other license is simply not the BSD license, but definitely fits in with the BSD way, in the grand scheme of things.
Re:The prior license wasn't free enough for BSD (Score:1)
I doubt it, from the top of the license:
along with this piece of section 4:
Show that Kirk probably recieved no money for people using softupdates. I've used it in FreeBSD since 3.0-RELEASE (maybe earlier) and I've never had to contribute any money to Kirk.
The old license was probably in place because Kirk didn't feel that softupdates was proven or ready for widespread use. With this sort of license when you buy a product using softupdates you can examine the source to see if you really trust what softupdates is doing to your disk. It is required. With a BSD license you don't get that protection.
Of course its hard to tell without asking Kirk himself why the old license was in place...
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Eric is chisled like a Greek Godess