# SOME DESCRIPTIVE TITLE # Copyright (C) YEAR The FreeBSD Project # This file is distributed under the same license as the FreeBSD Documentation package. # FIRST AUTHOR , YEAR. # #, fuzzy msgid "" msgstr "" "Project-Id-Version: FreeBSD Documentation VERSION\n" "POT-Creation-Date: 2022-02-01 09:21-0300\n" "PO-Revision-Date: YEAR-MO-DA HO:MI+ZONE\n" "Last-Translator: FULL NAME \n" "Language-Team: LANGUAGE \n" "Language: \n" "MIME-Version: 1.0\n" "Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8\n" "Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit\n" #. type: Title = #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:1 #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:11 #, no-wrap msgid "Why you should use a BSD style license for your Open Source Project" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:43 msgid "'''" msgstr "" #. type: Title == #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:47 #, no-wrap msgid "Introduction" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:52 msgid "" "This document makes a case for using a BSD style license for software and " "data; specifically it recommends using a BSD style license in place of the " "GPL. It can also be read as a BSD versus GPL Open Source License " "introduction and summary." msgstr "" #. type: Title == #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:54 #, no-wrap msgid "Very Brief Open Source History" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:60 msgid "" "Long before the term \"Open Source\" was used, software was developed by " "loose associations of programmers and freely exchanged. Starting in the " "early 1950's, organizations such as http://www.share.org[SHARE] and http://" "www.decus.org[DECUS] developed much of the software that computer hardware " "companies bundled with their hardware offerings. At that time computer " "companies were in the hardware business; anything that reduced software cost " "and made more programs available made the hardware companies more " "competitive." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:67 msgid "" "This model changed in the 1960's. In 1965 ADR developed the first licensed " "software product independent of a hardware company. ADR was competing " "against a free IBM package originally developed by IBM customers. ADR " "patented their software in 1968. To stop sharing of their program, they " "provided it under an equipment lease in which payment was spread over the " "lifetime of the product. ADR thus retained ownership and could control " "resale and reuse." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:70 msgid "" "In 1969 the US Department of Justice charged IBM with destroying businesses " "by bundling free software with IBM hardware. As a result of this suit, IBM " "unbundled its software; that is, software became independent products " "separate from hardware." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:75 msgid "" "In 1968 Informatics introduced the first commercial killer-app and rapidly " "established the concept of the software product, the software company, and " "very high rates of return. Informatics developed the perpetual license " "which is now standard throughout the computer industry, wherein ownership is " "never transferred to the customer." msgstr "" #. type: Title == #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:77 #, no-wrap msgid "Unix from a BSD Licensing Perspective" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:83 msgid "" "AT&T, who owned the original Unix implementation, was a publicly regulated " "monopoly tied up in anti-trust court; it was legally unable to sell a " "product into the software market. It was, however, able to provide it to " "academic institutions for the price of media." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:89 msgid "" "Universities rapidly adopted Unix after an OS conference publicized its " "availability. It was extremely helpful that Unix ran on the PDP-11, a very " "affordable 16-bit computer, and was coded in a high-level language that was " "demonstrably good for systems programming. The DEC PDP-11 had, in effect, " "an open hardware interface designed to make it easy for customers to write " "their own OS, which was common. As DEC founder Ken Olsen famously " "proclaimed, \"software comes from heaven when you have good hardware\"." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:95 msgid "" "Unix author Ken Thompson returned to his alma mater, University of " "California Berkeley (UCB), in 1975 and taught the kernel line-by-line. This " "ultimately resulted in an evolving system known as BSD (Berkeley Standard " "Distribution). UCB converted Unix to 32-bits, added virtual memory, and " "implemented the version of the TCP/IP stack upon which the Internet was " "essentially built. UCB made BSD available for the cost of media, under what " "became known as \"the BSD license\". A customer purchased Unix from AT&T " "and then ordered a BSD tape from UCB." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:99 msgid "" "In the mid-1980s a government anti-trust case against AT&T ended with the " "break-up of AT&T. AT&T still owned Unix and was now able to sell it. AT&T " "embarked on an aggressive licensing effort and most commercial Unixes of the " "day became AT&T-derived." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:105 msgid "" "In the early 1990's AT&T sued UCB over license violations related to BSD. " "UCB discovered that AT&T had incorporated, without acknowledgment or " "payment, many improvements due to BSD into AT&T's products, and a lengthy " "court case, primarily between AT&T and UCB, ensued. During this period some " "UCB programmers embarked on a project to rewrite any AT&T code associated " "with BSD. This project resulted in a system called BSD 4.4-lite (lite " "because it was not a complete system; it lacked 6 key AT&T files)." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:109 msgid "" "A lengthy series of articles published slightly later in Dr. Dobbs magazine " "described a BSD-derived 386 PC version of Unix, with BSD-licensed " "replacement files for the 6 missing 4.4 lite files. This system, named " "386BSD, was due to ex-UCB programmer William Jolitz. It became the original " "basis of all the PC BSDs in use today." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:112 msgid "" "In the mid 1990s, Novell purchased AT&T's Unix rights and a (then secret) " "agreement was reached to terminate the lawsuit. UCB soon terminated its " "support for BSD." msgstr "" #. type: Title == #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:114 #, no-wrap msgid "The Current State of FreeBSD and BSD Licenses" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:120 msgid "" "The so-called http://www.opensource.org/licenses/bsd-license.php[new BSD " "license] applied to FreeBSD within the last few years is effectively a " "statement that you can do anything with the program or its source, but you " "do not have any warranty and none of the authors has any liability " "(basically, you cannot sue anybody). This new BSD license is intended to " "encourage product commercialization. Any BSD code can be sold or included " "in proprietary products without any restrictions on the availability of your " "code or your future behavior." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:123 msgid "" "Do not confuse the new BSD license with \"public domain\". While an item in " "the public domain is also free for all to use, it has no owner." msgstr "" #. type: Title == #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:125 #, no-wrap msgid "The origins of the GPL" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:129 msgid "" "While the future of Unix had been so muddled in the late 1980s and early " "1990s, the GPL, another development with important licensing considerations, " "reached fruition." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:138 msgid "" "Richard Stallman, the developer of Emacs, was a member of the staff at MIT " "when his lab switched from home-grown to proprietary systems. Stallman " "became upset when he found that he could not legally add minor improvements " "to the system. (Many of Stallman's co-workers had left to form two " "companies based on software developed at MIT and licensed by MIT; there " "appears to have been disagreement over access to the source code for this " "software). Stallman devised an alternative to the commercial software " "license and called it the GPL, or \"GNU Public License\". He also started a " "non-profit foundation, the http://www.fsf.org[Free Software Foundation] " "(FSF), which intended to develop an entire operating system, including all " "associated software, that would not be subject to proprietary licensing. " "This system was called GNU, for \"GNU is Not Unix\"." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:143 msgid "" "The GPL was designed to be the antithesis of the standard proprietary " "license. To this end, any modifications that were made to a GPL program " "were required to be given back to the GPL community (by requiring that the " "source of the program be available to the user) and any program that used or " "linked to GPL code was required to be under the GPL. The GPL was intended " "to keep software from becoming proprietary. As the last paragraph of the " "GPL states:" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:145 msgid "" "\"This General Public License does not permit incorporating your program " "into proprietary programs.\"<>" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:147 msgid "" "The http://www.opensource.org/licenses/gpl-license.php[GPL] is a complex " "license so here are some rules of thumb when using the GPL:" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:149 msgid "" "you can charge as much as you want for distributing, supporting, or " "documenting the software, but you cannot sell the software itself." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:150 msgid "" "the rule-of-thumb states that if GPL source is required for a program to " "compile, the program must be under the GPL. Linking statically to a GPL " "library requires a program to be under the GPL." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:151 msgid "" "the GPL requires that any patents associated with GPLed software must be " "licensed for everyone's free use." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:152 msgid "" "simply aggregating software together, as when multiple programs are put on " "one disk, does not count as including GPLed programs in non-GPLed programs." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:153 msgid "" "output of a program does not count as a derivative work. This enables the " "gcc compiler to be used in commercial environments without legal problems." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:154 msgid "" "since the Linux kernel is under the GPL, any code statically linked with the " "Linux kernel must be GPLed. This requirement can be circumvented by " "dynamically linking loadable kernel modules. This permits companies to " "distribute binary drivers, but often has the disadvantage that they will " "only work for particular versions of the Linux kernel." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:157 msgid "" "Due in part to its complexity, in many parts of the world today the " "legalities of the GPL are being ignored in regard to Linux and related " "software. The long-term ramifications of this are unclear." msgstr "" #. type: Title == #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:159 #, no-wrap msgid "The origins of Linux and the LGPL" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:164 msgid "" "While the commercial Unix wars raged, the Linux kernel was developed as a PC " "Unix clone. Linus Torvalds credits the existence of the GNU C compiler and " "the associated GNU tools for the existence of Linux. He put the Linux " "kernel under the GPL." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:173 msgid "" "Remember that the GPL requires anything that statically links to any code " "under the GPL also be placed under the GPL. The source for this code must " "thus be made available to the user of the program. Dynamic linking, " "however, is not considered a violation of the GPL. Pressure to put " "proprietary applications on Linux became overwhelming. Such applications " "often must link with system libraries. This resulted in a modified version " "of the GPL called the http://www.opensource.org/licenses/lgpl-license." "php[LGPL] (\"Library\", since renamed to \"Lesser\", GPL). The LGPL allows " "proprietary code to be linked to the GNU C library, glibc. You do not have " "to release the source code which has been dynamically linked to an LGPLed " "library." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:177 msgid "" "If you statically link an application with glibc, such as is often required " "in embedded systems, you cannot keep your application proprietary, that is, " "the source must be released. Both the GPL and LGPL require any " "modifications to the code directly under the license to be released." msgstr "" #. type: Title == #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:179 #, no-wrap msgid "Open Source licenses and the Orphaning Problem" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:184 msgid "" "One of the serious problems associated with proprietary software is known as " "\"orphaning\". This occurs when a single business failure or change in a " "product strategy causes a huge pyramid of dependent systems and companies to " "fail for reasons beyond their control. Decades of experience have shown " "that the momentary size or success of a software supplier is no guarantee " "that their software will remain available, as current market conditions and " "strategies can change rapidly." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:186 msgid "" "The GPL attempts to prevent orphaning by severing the link to proprietary " "intellectual property." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:191 msgid "" "A BSD license gives a small company the equivalent of software-in-escrow " "without any legal complications or costs. If a BSD-licensed program becomes " "orphaned, a company can simply take over, in a proprietary manner, the " "program on which they are dependent. An even better situation occurs when a " "BSD code-base is maintained by a small informal consortium, since the " "development process is not dependent on the survival of a single company or " "product line. The survivability of the development team when they are " "mentally in the zone is much more important than simple physical " "availability of the source code." msgstr "" #. type: Title == #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:193 #, no-wrap msgid "What a license cannot do" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:197 msgid "" "No license can guarantee future software availability. Although a copyright " "holder can traditionally change the terms of a copyright at anytime, the " "presumption in the BSD community is that such an attempt simply causes the " "source to fork." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:203 msgid "" "The GPL explicitly disallows revoking the license. It has occurred, " "however, that a company (Mattel) purchased a GPL copyright (cphack), revoked " "the entire copyright, went to court, and prevailed <>. That is, they " "legally revoked the entire distribution and all derivative works based on " "the copyright. Whether this could happen with a larger and more dispersed " "distribution is an open question; there is also some confusion regarding " "whether the software was really under the GPL." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:208 msgid "" "In another example, Red Hat purchased Cygnus, an engineering company that " "had taken over development of the FSF compiler tools. Cygnus was able to do " "so because they had developed a business model in which they sold support " "for GNU software. This enabled them to employ some 50 engineers and drive " "the direction of the programs by contributing the preponderance of " "modifications. As Donald Rosenberg states \"projects using licenses like " "the GPL...live under constant threat of having someone take over the project " "by producing a better version of the code and doing it faster than the " "original owners.\" <>" msgstr "" #. type: Title == #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:210 #, no-wrap msgid "GPL Advantages and Disadvantages" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:214 msgid "" "A common reason to use the GPL is when modifying or extending the gcc " "compiler. This is particularly apt when working with one-off specialty CPUs " "in environments where all software costs are likely to be considered " "overhead, with minimal expectations that others will use the resulting " "compiler." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:217 msgid "" "The GPL is also attractive to small companies selling CDs in an environment " "where \"buy-low, sell-high\" may still give the end-user a very inexpensive " "product. It is also attractive to companies that expect to survive by " "providing various forms of technical support, including documentation, for " "the GPLed intellectual property world." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:220 msgid "" "A less publicized and unintended use of the GPL is that it is very favorable " "to large companies that want to undercut software companies. In other " "words, the GPL is well suited for use as a marketing weapon, potentially " "reducing overall economic benefit and contributing to monopolistic behavior." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:223 msgid "" "The GPL can present a real problem for those wishing to commercialize and " "profit from software. For example, the GPL adds to the difficulty a " "graduate student will have in directly forming a company to commercialize " "his research results, or the difficulty a student will have in joining a " "company on the assumption that a promising research project will be " "commercialized." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:228 msgid "" "For those who must work with statically-linked implementations of multiple " "software standards, the GPL is often a poor license, because it precludes " "using proprietary implementations of the standards. The GPL thus minimizes " "the number of programs that can be built using a GPLed standard. The GPL " "was intended to not provide a mechanism to develop a standard on which one " "engineers proprietary products. (This does not apply to Linux applications " "because they do not statically link, rather they use a trap-based API.)" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:232 msgid "" "The GPL attempts to make programmers contribute to an evolving suite of " "programs, then to compete in the distribution and support of this suite. " "This situation is unrealistic for many required core system standards, which " "may be applied in widely varying environments which require commercial " "customization or integration with legacy standards under existing (non-GPL) " "licenses. Real-time systems are often statically linked, so the GPL and " "LGPL are definitely considered potential problems by many embedded systems " "companies." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:235 msgid "" "The GPL is an attempt to keep efforts, regardless of demand, at the research " "and development stages. This maximizes the benefits to researchers and " "developers, at an unknown cost to those who would benefit from wider " "distribution." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:239 msgid "" "The GPL was designed to keep research results from transitioning to " "proprietary products. This step is often assumed to be the last step in the " "traditional technology transfer pipeline and it is usually difficult enough " "under the best of circumstances; the GPL was intended to make it impossible." msgstr "" #. type: Title == #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:241 #, no-wrap msgid "BSD Advantages" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:244 msgid "" "A BSD style license is a good choice for long duration research or other " "projects that need a development environment that:" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:246 msgid "has near zero cost" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:247 msgid "will evolve over a long period of time" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:248 msgid "" "permits anyone to retain the option of commercializing final results with " "minimal legal issues." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:250 msgid "" "This final consideration may often be the dominant one, as it was when the " "Apache project decided upon its license:" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:254 msgid "" "\"This type of license is ideal for promoting the use of a reference body of " "code that implements a protocol for common service. This is another reason " "why we choose it for the Apache group - many of us wanted to see HTTP " "survive and become a true multiparty standard, and would not have minded in " "the slightest if Microsoft or Netscape choose to incorporate our HTTP engine " "or any other component of our code into their products, if it helped further " "the goal of keeping HTTP common... All this means that, strategically " "speaking, the project needs to maintain sufficient momentum, and that " "participants realize greater value by contributing their code to the " "project, even code that would have had value if kept proprietary.\"" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:258 msgid "" "Developers tend to find the BSD license attractive as it keeps legal issues " "out of the way and lets them do whatever they want with the code. In " "contrast, those who expect primarily to use a system rather than program it, " "or expect others to evolve the code, or who do not expect to make a living " "from their work associated with the system (such as government employees), " "find the GPL attractive, because it forces code developed by others to be " "given to them and keeps their employer from retaining copyright and thus " "potentially \"burying\" or orphaning the software. If you want to force " "your competitors to help you, the GPL is attractive." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:265 msgid "" "A BSD license is not simply a gift. The question \"why should we help our " "competitors or let them steal our work?\" comes up often in relation to a " "BSD license. Under a BSD license, if one company came to dominate a product " "niche that others considered strategic, the other companies can, with " "minimal effort, form a mini-consortium aimed at reestablishing parity by " "contributing to a competitive BSD variant that increases market competition " "and fairness. This permits each company to believe that it will be able to " "profit from some advantage it can provide, while also contributing to " "economic flexibility and efficiency. The more rapidly and easily the " "cooperating members can do this, the more successful they will be. A BSD " "license is essentially a minimally complicated license that enables such " "behavior." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:268 msgid "" "A key effect of the GPL, making a complete and competitive Open Source " "system widely available at cost of media, is a reasonable goal. A BSD style " "license, in conjunction with ad-hoc-consortiums of individuals, can achieve " "this goal without destroying the economic assumptions built around the " "deployment-end of the technology transfer pipeline." msgstr "" #. type: Title == #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:270 #, no-wrap msgid "Specific Recommendations for using a BSD license" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:275 msgid "" "The BSD license is preferable for transferring research results in a way " "that will widely be deployed and most benefit an economy. As such, research " "funding agencies, such as the NSF, ONR and DARPA, should encourage in the " "earliest phases of funded research projects, the adoption of BSD style " "licenses for software, data, results, and open hardware. They should also " "encourage formation of standards based around implemented Open Source " "systems and ongoing Open Source projects." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:277 msgid "" "Government policy should minimize the costs and difficulties in moving from " "research to deployment. When possible, grants should require results to be " "available under a commercialization friendly BSD style license." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:278 msgid "" "In many cases, the long-term results of a BSD style license more accurately " "reflect the goals proclaimed in the research charter of universities than " "what occurs when results are copyrighted or patented and subject to " "proprietary university licensing. Anecdotal evidence exists that " "universities are financially better rewarded in the long run by releasing " "research results and then appealing to donations from commercially " "successful alumni." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:279 msgid "" "Companies have long recognized that the creation of de facto standards is a " "key marketing technique. The BSD license serves this role well, if a company " "really has a unique advantage in evolving the system. The license is legally " "attractive to the widest audience while the company's expertise ensures " "their control. There are times when the GPL may be the appropriate vehicle " "for an attempt to create such a standard, especially when attempting to " "undermine or co-opt others. The GPL, however, penalizes the evolution of " "that standard, because it promotes a suite rather than a commercially " "applicable standard. Use of such a suite constantly raises commercialization " "and legal issues. It may not be possible to mix standards when some are " "under the GPL and others are not. A true technical standard should not " "mandate exclusion of other standards for non-technical reasons." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:280 msgid "" "Companies interested in promoting an evolving standard, which can become the " "core of other companies' commercial products, should be wary of the GPL. " "Regardless of the license used, the resulting software will usually devolve " "to whoever actually makes the majority of the engineering changes and most " "understands the state of the system. The GPL simply adds more legal friction " "to the result." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:281 msgid "" "Large companies, in which Open Source code is developed, should be aware " "that programmers appreciate Open Source because it leaves the software " "available to the employee when they change employers. Some companies " "encourage this behavior as an employment perk, especially when the software " "involved is not directly strategic. It is, in effect, a front-loaded " "retirement benefit with potential lost opportunity costs but no direct " "costs. Encouraging employees to work for peer acclaim outside the company is " "a cheap portable benefit a company can sometimes provide with near zero " "downside." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:282 msgid "" "Small companies with software projects vulnerable to orphaning should " "attempt to use the BSD license when possible. Companies of all sizes should " "consider forming such Open Source projects when it is to their mutual " "advantage to maintain the minimal legal and organization overheads " "associated with a true BSD-style Open Source project." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:283 msgid "" "Non-profits should participate in Open Source projects when possible. To " "minimize software engineering problems, such as mixing code under different " "licenses, BSD-style licenses should be encouraged. Being leery of the GPL " "should particularly be the case with non-profits that interact with the " "developing world. In some locales where application of law becomes a costly " "exercise, the simplicity of the new BSD license, as compared to the GPL, may " "be of considerable advantage." msgstr "" #. type: Title == #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:285 #, no-wrap msgid "Conclusion" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:290 msgid "" "In contrast to the GPL, which is designed to prevent the proprietary " "commercialization of Open Source code, the BSD license places minimal " "restrictions on future behavior. This allows BSD code to remain Open Source " "or become integrated into commercial solutions, as a project's or company's " "needs change. In other words, the BSD license does not become a legal time-" "bomb at any point in the development process." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:292 msgid "" "In addition, since the BSD license does not come with the legal complexity " "of the GPL or LGPL licenses, it allows developers and companies to spend " "their time creating and promoting good code rather than worrying if that " "code violates licensing." msgstr "" #. type: Title == #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:295 #, no-wrap msgid "Bibliographical References" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:298 msgid "[[[one,1]]] http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:300 msgid "" "[[[two,2]]] http://archives.cnn.com/2000/TECH/computing/03/28/cyberpatrol." "mirrors/" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:302 msgid "" "[[[three,3]]] Open Source: the Unauthorized White Papers, Donald K. " "Rosenberg, IDG Books, 2000. Quotes are from page 114, \"Effects of the GNU " "GPL\"." msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:304 msgid "" "[[[four,4]]] In the \"What License to Use?\" section of http://www.oreilly." "com/catalog/opensources/book/brian.html" msgstr "" #. type: Plain text #: documentation/content/en/articles/bsdl-gpl/_index.adoc:305 msgid "" "This whitepaper is a condensation of an original work available at http://" "alumni.cse.ucsc.edu/~brucem/open_source_license.htm" msgstr ""