Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 24th Sep 2007 17:35 UTC, submitted by Rahul
Law and Order Monsoon Multimedia, which was subjected to the first US lawsuit on non-compliance with the GPL, has published a press release in which they agree to make any modifications public and thereby complying to the requirements stipulated in the GPL license. "Monsoon Multimedia today announced efforts to fully comply with the GPL. Monsoon is in settlement negotiations with BusyBox to resolve the matter and intends to fully comply with all open-source software license requirements. Monsoon will make modified BusyBox source code publicly available on the company web-site in the coming weeks."
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Compliance
by elsewhere on Mon 24th Sep 2007 19:07 UTC
elsewhere
Member since:
2005-07-13

From my understanding, the GPL doesn't actually require you to make your source/changes public. They do require only to make your source/changes available to the people you're distributing the GPL-licensed product to upon request. Granted, any one of those people is then free to post the source themselves anywhere they want, but the obligation isn't on the distributor of the source to do so.

So in this case, Monsoon isn't necessarily obligated to make the source available on the website, but should be prepared to provide the source to any customer purchasing the infringing product at the customer's request.

I suspect many commercial products using GPL-protected code probably do so under the assumption that people won't actually care enough to request the code, unless they've done something mind-bendingly cool with it. Monsoon was probably under this assumption, so this should serve as a lesson to other manufacturers to be prepared to make the code available upon request, instead of hoping that no one will ask, or that they'll be willing to walk away empty handed.