Novell could be banned from selling Linux
Kristian Hermansen
kristian.hermansen at gmail.com
Sun Feb 4 16:26:45 EST 2007
On 2/4/07, Robert L Krawitz <rlk at alum.mit.edu> wrote:
> Only a copyright holder can take someone to court for violation of a
> copyright license. The FSF doesn't hold copyright to any of the Linux
> kernel that I'm aware of, and so would have no standing to go to
> court. It would have to be one of more of the kernel developers suing
> over a violation of the kernel's copyright. The FSF could take action
> if the copyright to any of the GNU tools were violated (since the FSF
> holds the copyright to the entire GNU toolchain).
>
> I read something else recently (don't remember just where) where Eben
> Moglen said that his words were taken completely out of context.
Eben was my lawyer during the PearPC/CherryOS GPL violation. From
what I experienced conversing with him, he is a highly intelligent and
eloquent individual. I'm sure he'll get his point across correctly if
he intends to :-)
But you are right. It is not up to the FSF alone. It really depends
on what the copyright holders want to do...
--
Kristian Hermansen
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