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- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!apple!voder!gatekeeper.nsc.com!psinntp!psinntp!crynwr!nelson
- From: nelson@crynwr.com (Russell Nelson)
- Newsgroups: gnu.misc.discuss
- Subject: Fund raising at the FSF
- Message-ID: <726640988snx@crynwr.com>
- Date: 10 Jan 93 07:48:07 GMT
- References: <1993Jan9.211106.22282@blaze.cs.jhu.edu>
- Organization: Crynwr Software
- Lines: 27
-
- In article <1993Jan9.211106.22282@blaze.cs.jhu.edu> arromdee@jyusenkyou.cs.jhu.edu writes:
-
- So suppose a slightly different scenario. I wrote two programs, A and B,
- both of which have subroutine S in them. Somehow A goes under the GPL,
- perhaps because I decided to put it under GPL, perhaps because I made it PD
- and someone else decided to put it under the GPL.
-
- I now decide to write C, which also uses subroutine S. If I take S from A,
- C is infected with the GPL. If I take S from B, C is not.
-
- Yet the two copies of S are still identical, byte for byte. I'm stuck; any
- third party can say "oh, you just took S from the GPL program. So C falls
- under the GPL, so I can copy C". Can _this_ happen and is _this_ intended?
-
- Or imagine that someone else wrote S, which is PD. Me and the GNU
- programmer independently used S in our programs. Once again some
- third party comes by and says "oh, you took S from the GPL
- program. I think I'll pirate your stuff." (Of course, if I
- register first, I've escaped, but what if I didn't manage to?)
- How could I possibly prove otherwise?
-
- It seems like the only way to resolve this paradox is by saying that
- something in the public domain remains in the public domain, even
- though someone might incorporate it into a copyrighted work. I
- believe that this is the way the legal system resolves it, but IANAL,
- and logic is too much to expect from the legal system.
-
- -russ <nelson@crynwr.com> What canst *thou* say?
- Crynwr Software Crynwr Software sells packet driver support.
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