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March 28, 2007 | Comments: (0)
Novell speaks up on the latest GPLv3 draft
On Bruce Lowry's blog (Bruce is the PR demi-god for Novell, and a great person) today he has Novell's position on the latest draft of the GPL. From his post:
Not earth shattering, but it does make me want to take a closer look at the draft's implications for the Novell/Microsoft pact, as the pact is a primary reason for the draft's delay (as the FSF was looking for ways to close the patent loophole Microsoft exploited).
- We will continue to distribute Linux. Nothing in this new draft of GPL3 inhibits Novell's ability to include GPL3 technologies in SUSE Linux Enterprise, openSUSE, and other Novell open source offerings, now and in the future. This is good news for our customers....
- We are firmly committed to continuing the partnership with Microsoft and, as we always have, fully complying with the terms of the licenses for the software that we ship, including software licensed under GPL3. If the final version of the GPL3 does potentially impact the agreement we have with Microsoft, we'll address that with Microsoft.
For instance, Draft 3 has this provision, which seems to undercut what Bruce says above:
Each contributor grants you a non-exclusive, worldwide, royalty-free patent license under the contributor's essential patent claims in its contribution, to make, use, sell, offer for sale, import and otherwise run, modify and propagate the contribution.How does this not undermine the Novell/Microsoft "covenant not to sue" deal? As I read this (IAAL, but not a very good one :-), the Novell/Microsoft covenant not to sue would have to apply to all downstream users of v3 software. So, while Novell and Microsoft could shake hands on a covenant not to sue over alleged patent violations in Linux, for example, they'd have to extend that same protection to all users of the software (or those who have a copy of the software).For purposes of the following three paragraphs, a "patent license" means a patent license, a covenant not to bring suit for patent infringement, or any other express agreement or commitment, however denominated, not to enforce a patent.
Or is that what it says? Actually, it talks about this applying to contributors, and not necessarily to those selling support around the software itself. A contributor is defined thus:
A "contributor" is a party who licenses under this License a work on which the Program is based.So maybe this just means that anyone who licenses their software under v3 would have to grant a patent license? Still need to think this through....
As you know, I'm an ardent critic of the pact, but I also don't think GPLv3 will be well-served trying to eradicate the possibility that it, or similar circumventing agreements, will happen again. For that sort of governance, we have to rely on the community to speak up.
Posted by Matt Asay on March 28, 2007 10:47 AM
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Hi Matt...
Flattery will get you everywhere....
Just a quick point. There is language in the draft that would make certain provisions regarding agreements prospective, not retroactive. We may be looking at different parts of the document. I refer to Section 11, paragraph 5 in the new draft: http://gplv3.fsf.org/gpl-draft-2007-03-28.html
Posted by: Bruce Lowry at March 28, 2007 03:04 PMI initially missed that, but thanks for pointing it out. I still can't really see how this would affect the Novell/Microsoft deal, retroactively or prospectively, as it would only apply to contributions you make to the Linux kernel, in the case of the patent deal, and not to Linux qua Linux (and your ability to support it), as such.
But maybe I'm missing something?
Regardless, you know I don't like the deal, but I also don't like micromanaging bad behavior through the legislation....If general principles can't capture current and future bad acts, then I think it's harmful to try to create specific principles to capture potential problems. I'd prefer to have Novell customers voting with their feet than the FSF voting with its pen on this one.
Posted by: Matt Asay at March 28, 2007 03:14 PM"I'd prefer to have Novell customers voting with their feet than the FSF voting with its pen on this one"
Why would they do that. Now customers can have their cake and eat it too.

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