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> Who says they're expending resources on Canonical? Well, they say it, right there in the article: "Conservancy contacted Canonical to inform them of their GPL violation". And at the end of the article, when they say "Our lawyers, in conjunction with our GPL compliance and software forensics experts, have analyzed the Linux+ZFS that Canonical includes in their Ubuntu 16.04 prereleases". That's three kinds of experts, all doing "analysis". And I say it above, when I talk about the article itself taking effort to write and the conversations it references also taking effort. These kinds of contacts aren't a one-sentence email fired off to 'hello@canonical.com'. They have to be thought out and worded correctly, and they engaged in a conversation afterwards. No, it's not like that email takes a week to write, but neither is it trivial; it's the result of thought, debate, and conversations. > So distributing CDDL'd source and asking the user to do "make zfs.ko" is fine. I really think you're missing my point. You keep speaking to the technical argument - I am not saying there is no merit in the technical argument. I want to reiterate (for the third time) that I think that this is far too small fry for a resource-starved group to chase after. Yes, there is a distinction here. No, it's not worth the time to chase, given other, more severe violations. I am making a starved resources argument, not a technical merits argument. In the grand scheme in the world of violations of free software licenses, Canonical's violation (providing a binary and the source it came from, not just the source) is about as mild as you can get. The core spirit of the GPL (that the source code is freely available) is not compromised by the presence or absence of a build artifact. |