Since you posted this message, have you-all come up with a Web-GPL or Server-GPL or something like that? I would be interested. > Author: Joseph C Wang > Email: http://www.mit.edu/~joe > Date: 1999/01/12 > > In article <77fmb4$squ$1@nnrp1.dejanews.com>, <http://www.my-dejanews.com/~brlewis> wrote: > >Clearly you've never maintained a modified version of third-party source, > >because you don't understand how costly it is for company X to hoard this way. > > Costly yes, but if you have deep pockets, it's doable. The whole > point of the GPL is to make it not merely expensive to hoard software, > but legally impossible. > > >Believe me, keeping up with new releases while retaining local modifications > >is burdensome, so company X had better be sure the benefit is worth the cost > >before it goes down that road. Company Y, not being so burdened, will win in > >the end. > > Except that company X has money to burn, and company Y does not. > > In our particular case, we have essentially no money, just people who > can do database work. Some of the people that could potentially enter > the market for course cataloging software could literally spend tens > of millions of dollars to wipe us out. > > What we want to do to prevent this is to make our software the common > open standard in cataloging courses. In order to get people to > develop using our software, we need a license that keeps our software > public regardless of what happens next. If we make it merely highly > expensive to hoard our software, we are going to get our heads handed > to us on a platter when the deep pockets move in. > > -- > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- > Joseph Wang Ph.D. Globewide Network Academy > http://www.gnacademy.org/~president FREE Distance Education catalog database > http://www.gnacademy.org Over 15,000 courses and degrees