Originally posted by Whaleboy
2.10
2.10
Originally posted by Whaleboy
Then you're suggesting that the GPL is little more than an ego trip.
Then you're suggesting that the GPL is little more than an ego trip.
Originally posted by Whaleboy
If you really want useful things to happen to your code, you apply the BSD licence it so corporations can pour in investment. It makes sense for them to contribute code back in turn so that it gets tested by the BSD community. Seems to function pretty well, going on the quality of the code wouldn't you agree?
If you really want useful things to happen to your code, you apply the BSD licence it so corporations can pour in investment. It makes sense for them to contribute code back in turn so that it gets tested by the BSD community. Seems to function pretty well, going on the quality of the code wouldn't you agree?
Just look at Microsoft. They stole drive compression from Stac Eletronics (lost the court case fortunately), stole the TCP/IP from BSD, and stole DOS code from Digital Research.
Originally posted by Whaleboy
On the contrary to "lets everybody steal your stuff", it allows you as a software developer to maintain your IP rights and not be forced to communistically disseminate your code to the world. If it was essentially stagnant, then the BSD's wouldn't be thriving now.
On the contrary to "lets everybody steal your stuff", it allows you as a software developer to maintain your IP rights and not be forced to communistically disseminate your code to the world. If it was essentially stagnant, then the BSD's wouldn't be thriving now.
2. Explain how the BSD license allows anybody to maintain control over his or her work.
3. It appears you don't understand the GNU Public License. You should read it carefully here.
4. BSD has been overtaken by Linux. It may not be stagnant, but not exactly thriving.
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