Re: [PATCH] Blacklist binary-only modules lying about their license

From: Linus Torvalds
Date: Fri Apr 30 2004 - 15:29:45 EST




On Fri, 30 Apr 2004, Marc Boucher wrote:
>
> > In contrast, wine was _written_ to do this emulation, so by definition
> > any
> > "bugs" are in wine itself (although I suspect that wine people
> > sometimes
> > would prefer it if Office came with sources ;).
>
> The same can be said about DriverLoader.

.. but not abotu the kernel that it depends on.

In other words, if driverloader was a stand-alone project, you could do
whatever the hell you wanted with it.

But it isn't a standalone project, is it? It depends on the kernel, and
there is no question that driverloader is a derived work.

Which means that you had better follow the rules.

So stop yer whining. When you write your own operating system, and your
driver doesn't have to depend on anybody elses code, then you can set the
rules. As it is, the kernel requires modules to tell it their license, and
if you lie to it, that is not only potentially violating the DMCA, it's
also likely a crime under regular copyright laws (ie you are knowingly
misrepresenting a license - in this case the license of the binary part,
and that's not legal either).

> The purpose of the workaround is not to circumvent any protection, but
> to fix a real usability issue for systems in the field, which, as an
> expert you perhaps do not see, but users definitely massively felt and
> complained about.

Oh, so it's ok to do something illegal, because it helps usability? And
ethics take second place to "the user doesn't want to see that line in the
logs"?

Sure, that's a good argument. NOT.

GET RID OF YOUR LYING LICENSE LINE!

Linus
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