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xen-users
Re: [Xen-users] RE: Does it legal to analysize XEN source code and write
Tao Shen wrote:
7. Some of the examples in the open source industry right now
include: using PostgreSQL based code which is GPL'd, add a non-GPL'd
replication suite to it, and call it enterpriseDB. Using PostgreSQL
based code, tweak some variables, add some non-GPL'd code (interfaced
to the GPL'd one) to do distributed join and call it "bizgres" and
"greenplum". MySQL's Enterprise vs Community editions....the
examples are all other the place. All of them push the GPL boundary
but don't violate it. And what I call the "wrapper GPL" type
products, and "dual licensing". No, it's all perfect legal. From an
ethics perspective...it's arguable.
Feel free to discuss this as you see fit.
Entire OS's are built this way, such as RHEL with its additional
Clustering tools and its RedHat Network management tools. Zmanda does it
with the Amanda sotware as well, and there are numerous commercial
Nagios and MRTG management toolsets that are not themselves freeware or
open source. Tivo does their own special trick of locking down the
software so it can't be patched or modified, even though they publish
source to GPL tools they change, and that led partly to the changes in
GPLv3.
So it's an accepted practice, as long as you don't go over the carefully
drawn copyright lines and pull the Netgear trick of "we'll use glibc,
modify it, and just not tell anyone."
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