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By Stephen Shankland
Posted on ZDNet News: May 23, 2007 5:37:00 PM

SAN FRANCISCO--Eben Moglen, the law professor and open-source legal expert who has helped lead the revision of the General Public License, is predicting broad success for the upcoming new version.

"I predict that within the first year of adoption of GPL 3 there will be a net uptake by parties currently not using GPL that will be great in magnitude," Moglen told an audience here Tuesday at the Open Source Business Conference. That uptake will include "dozens of commercially important projects capable of choosing any license they want where they today use licenses that don't call for hard copyleft."

Copyleft, a term coined by Free Software Foundation founder Richard Stallman, refers to a key requirement of the GPL that an individual or organization that changes and distributes software must make those changes public. Some more "permissive" open-source licenses such as the Apache License permit changes to be kept secret and open-source software to be tightly incorporated into proprietary software.

Moglen is overseeing a contentious process of revamping the GPL, the most widely used license in the free and open-source software realm. Moglen, a Columbia law school professor and former IBM programmer, is stepping down as counsel to the FSF, but he remains active in another group called the Software Freedom Law Center.

Early drafts of GPL 3 triggered significant objections from several parties, including Linus Torvalds, leader of the GPL-covered Linux kernel. But the third and most recent draft of GPL 3 met with fewer gripes, and Moglen was bullish about its prospects.

Eben Moglen
Credit: Columbia
Law School
Eben Moglen

"We're four weeks from finished now, and we have consensus on large, important major changes," Moglen said. "Everybody is equally browned off, and that is how it should be, but we're all finishing together."

Drafting the new GPL, like writing open-source software, is a collective exercise in which numerous parties depend on one another, he said. "Everybody is so heavily embarked in everybody else's boats, and the consequences of failure are so far-reaching, people have no choice but to share their ideas and seek compromise and coexistence," Moglen said.

The GPL has the power to enable open-source software to dethrone Microsoft from its position of dominance, Moglen said. "The time is rapidly approaching when the GPL is capable of leveling the monopolist to the ground," he said.

Microsoft, with its packaged, proprietary software, has wiped out profit margins for hardware and services, he said. "The tax imposed by software was so high," he said. "Nobody has ever successfully calculated the harm done by Microsoft to the world. The number is too vast."

One provision Stallman considered but rejected for GPL 3 was some mechanism to deal with modifications to GPL software available as a network service. Under GPL 2, an entity that modifies the software but doesn't distribute it need not publish the changes, and that will continue under GPL 3, even if that software is available over the Internet through mechanisms today called application service providers or software as a service.

"The rights of a person who receives a service are different from the rights of a person who receives software as a program object," Moglen said.

Google in particular widely uses open-source software internally for services available publicly. It makes some open-source software changes publicly available, such as its modifications to the MySQL database. The free and open-source movement will apply other pressures to make sure such companies don't abuse the privilege, Moglen said.

"If you want to protect your business model, you must be model citizens of the environment. If you shrink, political pressure will grow to constrain your rights to secure the rights of everyone else," Moglen said. "Upon the behavior of Google much depends."

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  • Most Recent of 41 Talkback(s)
What insult?
I just read the post 3 times just see if maybe there was even an extremely subtle insult. I found none. Did you reply to the wrong spot?... (Read the rest)
Posted by: voska Posted on: 05/24/07 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
The momentum is building, this will be exciting. I can't wait to see all of  DonnieBoy | 05/23/07
MS can't wait either ...  George Mitchell | 05/23/07
In other news  Yagotta B. Kidding | 05/23/07
Not LINUX  No_Ax_to_Grind | 05/23/07
Yes, Linux. It would be a pain, but it will likely get done, after many  DonnieBoy | 05/23/07
Maybe in 5 or 10 years  No_Ax_to_Grind | 05/23/07
I would imagine it would take less than a year.  DonnieBoy | 05/23/07
That just goes to show how much you know about Linux ...  George Mitchell | 05/23/07
Sigh, can't post with out insulting I see.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 05/23/07
Not that you have ever been known to insult anyone of course ...  George Mitchell | 05/23/07
You are right here, but, I think there will be enough momentum eventualy  DonnieBoy | 05/23/07
What insult?  voska | 05/24/07
Broken clock  Yagotta B. Kidding | 05/23/07
Another thing, the collective thought that went in to the GPL3 is truely  DonnieBoy | 05/23/07
And, how about a big round of applause for Eben Moglen. He has not gotten  DonnieBoy | 05/23/07
Compromises  b3timmons | 05/23/07
Microsoft is the driving force ...  George Mitchell | 05/23/07
I agree in part,  No_Ax_to_Grind | 05/23/07
Yup, you're right!  George Mitchell | 05/23/07
If you think this is like SCO  No_Ax_to_Grind | 05/23/07
SCO was just as confident as you are ...  George Mitchell | 05/23/07
One more time, this is not even remotely  No_Ax_to_Grind | 05/23/07
NoAx certainly has his ******* all in a bunch over this. He can't stand it  DonnieBoy | 05/23/07
Oh really? Please explain!  Zogg | 05/24/07
Eben Moglen predicts broad embrace of GPL 3  Loverock Davidson | 05/23/07
If you believe a poll with an 11% response rate ...  George Mitchell | 05/23/07
The guy is dreaming.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 05/23/07
And this post just shows how confused you are ...  George Mitchell | 05/23/07
Yes, I was speaking of teh Linux kernel  No_Ax_to_Grind | 05/23/07
FUD, FUD, FUD ...  George Mitchell | 05/23/07
Nope, unless of course you are saying violate  No_Ax_to_Grind | 05/23/07
Man, get over it, the Linux kernel will go to GPL3 eventually.  DonnieBoy | 05/23/07
George, belive it if you want.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 05/23/07
Man, this has really got you going. You WANT there to be conflict, and  DonnieBoy | 05/23/07
This promices to fork open source  No_Ax_to_Grind | 05/23/07
It will indeed be forked ...  George Mitchell | 05/23/07
open source lives on forks  CobraA1 | 05/23/07
Right, and the great thing about the FireFox fork, was that eventually,  DonnieBoy | 05/24/07
Wow! This really brought out the NBM'ers . . . (nt)  Basic Logic | 05/23/07
Hey, Where's Mike Cox ???  Basic Logic | 05/23/07
Mike Cox and his rep are in mourning and will be secluded.  DonnieBoy | 05/23/07

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