Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 6th Jul 2006 19:03 UTC, submitted by Patrick
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RE[4]: Where's the problem?
by Cloudy on Sun 9th Jul 2006 00:45
in reply to "RE[3]: Where's the problem?"
bypassing the spirit (not the letter) of the GPL by having a fast-moving payed team modify code to the point backporting by a slow-moving voluntary team becomes extremely difficult.
That hardly bybasses the "spirit" of the GPL.
If anything, slowing down because someone can't keep up would be the violation.




Member since:
2005-07-05
Debian is licensed under the GPL, Canonical/Ubuntu uses Debian, builds from it and beyond, has everything open source, ready for you guys to take it back, so what's stopping you from doing so? You actually expect to get bite-sized chunks back that apply directly towards Debian? That's bizarre from any point of view.
And yet if this is not done, the patching effort equals almost nothing for Debian. It's simply not practical to extract changes from an entire package (or several related packages) which have been heavily modified in the context of another distro.
Look at what happened with Apple and KHTML:
http://www.osviews.com/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=articl...
Ubuntu vs Debian is actually the second high-profile case that has to deal with this issue: bypassing the spirit (not the letter) of the GPL by having a fast-moving payed team modify code to the point backporting by a slow-moving voluntary team becomes extremely difficult.
I for one hope to see some solution for this issue and I hope more companies do not get ideas from this.