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by jheriko
3941 days ago
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i think you have conflated some political rhetoric with reality there. free means free. its an abstract ideal... you do not live in a country where people are free, 'free country' and 'liberty' are politically charged terms which evoke particular ideals, which don't directly map to the meaning of the word 'freedom'. a big part of society is that we willingly give up certain freedoms for the greater good - this is what law is all about. in this particular case i think its clear cut. the GPL stops software from being free compared to an MIT or BSD style license... |
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It is a clear cut that many who argue MIT/BSD over GPL do so with the intention to add proprietary restrictions, while being dishonest in never talking about that aspect. Adding proprietary restrictions does not make something more free, and it attempts to frame the discussion to be about the word "free" rather than what licenses should be about: The intention of the author. If an author want to allow or not allow people to add proprietary restrictions, they are free to make that decision.