| > Consider the values: We link AGPL software and there's an x% chance we have to spend 10 billion dollars in litigation, engineering effort, and fines to keep our stuff closed source. At what value of X do you make this rule? That X% is at most the same for using proprietary software. AGPL does NOTHING beyond an ADDITIONAL license grant beyond that. You can pretend AGPL code was Copyright (c) All Rights Reserved. Google ought to ban all software not written in-house under that argument. In practice, since you've set the bar at $10 billion, that X% is 0%. There is no AGPL software in existence where damages would go over a few million dollars. If you're gonna swing around paranoid conspiracy theories with 10 billion dollar numbers, as you seem prone to, you should build all your data centers underground in case aliens form Mars attack. At what X% does that stop making sense? You're risking a TRILLION dollar business. > Punitive damages exist. They're a thing. Why are you pretending that they aren't? You're clearly not a lawyer here. You're confusing copyright law, normal business law, and tort law. Can you please name a realistic scenario where Google might be at risk for punitive damages under the AGPL? https://www.leagle.com/decision/1983925714f2d2111873 In a worst-case, if the copyright violation is intentional, which is astronomically unlikely, you'd be looking at treble damages. Which goes from peanuts to 3x peanuts. re: last comment. I apologize I accused Google about lying. Never confuse malice for stupidity. It's very possible Google is just being grossly idiotic. I still have vague memories of the old Google which used to hire smart people, so perhaps I just overestimated the company..... |
Can you explain to me how I'd import proprietary software into google's source code repository? The concern is about source code under the AGPL. Google treats AGPL source the same way as proprietary source: you don't stick them into the source repository unless you have access under a dual (or in the case of proprietary, single) license.
> There is no AGPL software in existence where damages would go over a few million dollars.
While I was incorrect about punitive damages, you're also incorrect about "profit" as damages, it's not the lost profit of the infringed, but the illegitimate profit of the infringer. So the potential loss isn't the cost of a negotiated license, but the total profit of Gmail or Youtube or Ads or all three over the infringing period. Yes, that's potentially billions in copyright claims.
See for example the Oracle v. Google case, where the copyright claim is for $8.8 billion in damages. So we have prior art for a ridiculous sounding copyright case with ~10Bn in damages that's currently awaiting a supreme court ruling. So X is clearly >0.