Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 4th Aug 2006 22:50 UTC
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Member since:
2005-07-08
I care, the Linux kernel community cares, and our lawyers care. Non-GPL Linux kernel modules are illegal. Furthermore, natural market forces will dictate that Linux drivers shall be licensed under the GPL.
Some users may choose to break the law by loading non-GPL kernel modules. These users, especially corporate users, are vulnerable to legal action. Other's might choose to load driver stubs that communicate with non-GPL userspace drivers, supporting an unethical end-run around the IP rights of the Linux kernel community, and experiencing broken drivers when they install kernel updates from their Linux distributors. Linux distributors can't support binary drivers, and the driver distributor can't even support you if you have any other binary drivers installed.
This deal will likely be copied by many of the other large OEMs over the next 6-12 months, and that will greatly increase the availability and feasibility of Linux on the desktop. Perhaps binary-only drivers were a workable stop-gap while the Linux userbase was small and largely self-supporting, but this distribution model will fail miserably under the weight of a growing Linux market.
It's not really about protecting the hardware vendors' IP rights, it's about the realities of the market. Customers want Linux and OEMs are going to give it to them. Linux was never designed or licensed to work well with proprietary drivers. This has slowed the uptake of Desktop Linux, I fully admit, but it hasn't stopped it. As Linux grows, it will force hardware vendors not only to write quality drivers, but it will force them to distribute them under the GPL. They simply won't have a choice unless they are willing to cede the Linux market to their competitors.