See here:
http://www.nabble.com/help-with-converting-Geoserver-site-to-Mapserver-td20919019.html
"Our organization has been putting the finishing touches on an application that is supposed to be released by the end of the year. Unexpectedly, it did not pass license review, because it used Geoserver, which is GPL-licensed. "
Isn't this really crazy?
Cheers
Andrea
--
Andrea Aime
OpenGeo - http://opengeo.org
Expert service straight from the developers.
Hi,
I have come across this a number of times. If you have VS Studio 6 or later,
check out the license agreement. It prohibits distribution of any
application built using VS with any application that is (to use Microsoft's
term) virally licensed. According to Bill, that includes GPL, LGPL and GNU
amongst others. Interestingly, if you research into it, they do not include
the BSD license in that term.
Cheers
Stuart
Andrea Aime-4 wrote:
See here:
http://www.nabble.com/help-with-converting-Geoserver-site-to-Mapserver-td20919019.html
"Our organization has been putting the finishing touches on an
application that is supposed to be released by the end of the year.
Unexpectedly, it did not pass license review, because it used Geoserver,
which is GPL-licensed. "
Isn't this really crazy?
Cheers
Andrea
--
Andrea Aime
OpenGeo - http://opengeo.org
Expert service straight from the developers.
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View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/An-organization-builds-an-app-on-top-of-GeoServer%2C-switches-to-MapServer-last-minute…-tp20954356p20954626.html
Sent from the GeoServer - Dev mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
Yeah that is too bad. Especially since they never brought up this issue us. TOPP as copyright holder has the ability to relicense in special situations no?
Andrea Aime wrote:
See here:
http://www.nabble.com/help-with-converting-Geoserver-site-to-Mapserver-td20919019.html
"Our organization has been putting the finishing touches on an application that is supposed to be released by the end of the year. Unexpectedly, it did not pass license review, because it used Geoserver, which is GPL-licensed. "
Isn't this really crazy?
Cheers
Andrea
--
Justin Deoliveira
OpenGeo - http://opengeo.org
Enterprise support for open source geospatial.
Justin Deoliveira ha scritto:
Yeah that is too bad. Especially since they never brought up this issue us. TOPP as copyright holder has the ability to relicense in special situations no?
If my memory serves me right, our contribution agreement said that
TOPP can relicense GeoServer and eventually sell it under a different
license with the provision that every money made out of it
is given to the PSC to use to further the development of GeoServer.
But I'm not sure, and in fact that never happened so far.
Cheers
Andrea
--
Andrea Aime
OpenGeo - http://opengeo.org
Expert service straight from the developers.
Although I am not a license guru, I feel like we should figure out if there is a legal way to integrate with restrictive licensing, and then advertise this prominently (or at least somewhere on our wiki)...
...unless there is some reason why we wouldn't want GeoServer used in these cases?
Thanks,
Mike Pumphrey
OpenGeo - http://opengeo.org
stumit63 wrote:
Hi,
I have come across this a number of times. If you have VS Studio 6 or later,
check out the license agreement. It prohibits distribution of any
application built using VS with any application that is (to use Microsoft's
term) virally licensed. According to Bill, that includes GPL, LGPL and GNU
amongst others. Interestingly, if you research into it, they do not include
the BSD license in that term.
Cheers
Stuart
Andrea Aime-4 wrote:
See here:
http://www.nabble.com/help-with-converting-Geoserver-site-to-Mapserver-td20919019.html
"Our organization has been putting the finishing touches on an application that is supposed to be released by the end of the year. Unexpectedly, it did not pass license review, because it used Geoserver, which is GPL-licensed. "
Isn't this really crazy?
Cheers
Andrea
--
Andrea Aime
OpenGeo - http://opengeo.org
Expert service straight from the developers.
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My philosophy with relicensing has always been that the GPL is nice because it forces people to ask us before they go and build a commercial project on it. Every other case we want to encourage people to do.
I wrote up a good bit on the license awhile ago, see http://geoserver.org/display/GEOSDOC/8+Licensing
I hope it makes it pretty clear that we don't believe this case to be in violation. But I agree it could be better to more prominently let people know that we can grant license exceptions if they feel they need them. But I do think people who are wanting to build full commercial projects should either share their source with the community or else pay a license fee.
Unfortunately we still haven't finished all the contributor agreements to be able to relicense. But hopefully we can get to it in the new year. There was a company that was very interested in licensing GeoServer for use in a commercial project, so that provided motivation. But they decided to go another route (buy a company), and no one has brought up any real need for relicensing since.
Chris
Mike Pumphrey wrote:
Although I am not a license guru, I feel like we should figure out if there is a legal way to integrate with restrictive licensing, and then advertise this prominently (or at least somewhere on our wiki)...
...unless there is some reason why we wouldn't want GeoServer used in these cases?
Thanks,
Mike Pumphrey
OpenGeo - http://opengeo.org
stumit63 wrote:
Hi,
I have come across this a number of times. If you have VS Studio 6 or later,
check out the license agreement. It prohibits distribution of any
application built using VS with any application that is (to use Microsoft's
term) virally licensed. According to Bill, that includes GPL, LGPL and GNU
amongst others. Interestingly, if you research into it, they do not include
the BSD license in that term.
Cheers
Stuart
Andrea Aime-4 wrote:
See here:
http://www.nabble.com/help-with-converting-Geoserver-site-to-Mapserver-td20919019.html
"Our organization has been putting the finishing touches on an application that is supposed to be released by the end of the year. Unexpectedly, it did not pass license review, because it used Geoserver, which is GPL-licensed. "
Isn't this really crazy?
Cheers
Andrea
--
Andrea Aime
OpenGeo - http://opengeo.org
Expert service straight from the developers.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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