Re: Fedora has been set free
Hm, I think the Linux world as a whole just got better.
Anyway, great news. :grin:
Re: Fedora has been set free
I don't really see how that changes much, Fedora was extremely free before and RH provided good guidance. I personally fear that RH will no divert more engineering time directly into RHEL instead of Fedora, lenghten the Fedora cycle (so it mismatches GNOME release cycles meaning Fedora will at some point ship with GNOME releases that are hopelessly outdated)
Now will this mean Fedora is suddenly free to add stuff like Mono, I doubt it, doing so will still be in violation of the GPL (patents require a royalty free redistribution clause).
But I'm happy to see more community involvement welcomed by RedHat, however I like Fedora as it has been so far, it's a high quality product and RH work well with the community.
Re: Fedora has been set free
Quote:
Originally Posted by Lovechild
Now will this mean Fedora is suddenly free to add stuff like Mono, I doubt it, doing so will still be in violation of the GPL (patents require a royalty free redistribution clause).
Where did you get the idea that packaging Mono would be a violation of the GPL??? Did you tell all the other distros, like Debian and Ubuntu, that are packaging it because it is free software?
And since when exactly did GPL compatability become a requirement for inclusion into Fedora? They are shipping apache, aren't they?
Re: Fedora has been set free
Quote:
Originally Posted by Knome_fan
Where did you get the idea that packaging Mono would be a violation of the GPL??? Did you tell all the other distros, like Debian and Ubuntu, that are packaging it because it is free software?
And since when exactly did GPL compatability become a requirement for inclusion into Fedora? They are shipping apache, aren't they?
Because the .NET ECMA license doesn't grant the patent grants required by the GPL, therefore linking with a GPL'ed piece of code is in violation of said license. For extensive details of this argument read the Fedora Extras mailinglist where it has been explained over and over again.
Re: Fedora has been set free
I have now given up trying to understand the company that is Redhat. Who knows what their next move will be, there's just no guessing it now :)