Linked by Amjith Ramanujam on Thu 14th Aug 2008 19:00 UTC, submitted by Moulinneuf
Law and Order A federal appeals court has overruled a lower court ruling that, if sustained, would have severely hampered the enforceability of free software licenses. The lower court had found that redistributing software in violation of the terms of a free software license could constitute a breach of contract, but was not copyright infringement. The difference matters because copyright law affords much stronger remedies against infringement than does contract law. If allowed to stand, the decision could have neutered popular copyleft licenses such as the GPL and Creative Commons licenses. The district court decision was overturned on Wednesday by the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit.
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Kind of funny really ...
by WorknMan on Thu 14th Aug 2008 21:40 UTC
WorknMan
Member since:
2005-11-13

How the hell are you gonna get sued for violating the license for a piece of software that's supposed to be Free?

Note: That question is rhetorical, no need to answer. It's like the Conservative version of Freedom.. they're all for it, so long as your version of Freedom agrees with theirs.

IMHO, they should call it Copyleft software, because it ain't really Free.