| Sourcefire are selling services based around a GPL product. Not so familiar with Covalent but it appears they have some things available as GPL but if you want all the enterprise features then it isn't GPL. Redhat is the same really, they also make their money from support. I believe you need to buy RHEL if you want the support from them, although this might have changed now. I never suggested that GPL cannot be part of a business plan , I was just disagreeing with the statement that there are companies that sell GPL software, in all cases I can find what you are really paying for is something else not the software itself. My point is more that there are many areas of software that this does not work in , games or most consumer software being an example. http://www.gnu.org/licenses/why-not-lgpl.html "Using the ordinary GPL for a library gives free software developers an advantage over proprietary developers: a library that they can use, while proprietary developers cannot use it." |
Sourcefire SELLS the product, flat out. If anything, they're more of a 'freemium' offering where the free product is a GPL product, and the 'premium' is a faster release cycle for patches / upgrades / definitions.
Covalent sells Apache. I've dealt with Covalent products at a number of federal installations, and I've never once seen a Covalent services rep. If their aim is to sell services, they're not doing a good job.
There are a cornucopia of other examples as well, but these are the three most fitting the description you claim doesn't exist. They do in fact exist, and are making money selling GPL software. That they also have services divisions has nothing to do with whether or not they're making money from selling software.