The
Free
Software Foundation (FSF) plans to release the final version of the
General
Public Licence version 3 (GPLv3) on 29 June.
On the day of release, a group of more than 15 open source projects will
release their software under the new licence, Brett Smith, a licensing
compliance engineer with the FSF, told
vnunet.com.
The projects are part of the
GNU operating
system and include
GNU
Sed, a text filtering utility or streams editor, and the
Tar
compression technology.
Other projects include the
Inetutils
set of internet utilities and the
Texinfo
documentation system.
The remaining so-called GNU programs will switch to the new licence in the
next few months, according to Smith.
These include key components of Linux such as
GLibC,
the fundamental library on which every program depends, and
GNU
Coreutils, a package that contains many basic tools needed for Unix-like
operating systems.
GNU is a free operating system that predates Linux by eight years. The
project is headed up by the FSF, which drafted the GPLv3 together with the
Software
Freedom Law Center.
The term 'Linux' refers only to the kernel of the operating system as well as
device drivers.
Linux distributions rely heavily on system utilities and libraries from the
GNU project. The GNU tools licence switch will subject all future Linux versions
to the GPLv3.
The new licence introduces two fundamental changes over the previous version.
Most notably, it will ban exclusive patent licensing deals.
A company providing a patent licence to a single GPLv3 user will by default
provide that pledge to all users and developers.
Secondly, the terms impose a ban on closed digital rights management
technologies, instead ensuring that users have the ability to strip any DRM
technology and still use the software or device on which it ran originally.
Some of the changes in the document have been inspired by last year's
Microsoft-Novell
partnership.
Microsoft uses a loophole in GPLv2 to provide end users with patent
protection without having to extend its pledge to the general population of GPL
users and developers.
While GPLv3 will prevent similar deals in the future, the FSF and Software
Freedom Law Center will allow the Novell partnership because they believe that
it will subject
Microsoft to GPLv3.
The new licence been the subject of fierce debate. Linux founder Linus
Torvalds has stated that he
sees no
benefits in adopting the new licence for the Linux kernel, although he might
change his mind if it would allow Linux to adopt the ZFS file system developed
by Sun
Microsystems.
Sun has said openly that it supports the licence and might adopt it for its
Solaris operating system. But the server maker has also warned that it will not
make a decision until it has studied the final GPLv3 release.
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