Picking a license

Lie Ryan lie.1296 at gmail.com
Wed May 12 03:19:26 EDT 2010


On 05/12/10 06:50, Patrick Maupin wrote:
> On May 11, 5:34 am, Paul Boddie <p... at boddie.org.uk> wrote:
>> On 10 Mai, 20:36, Patrick Maupin <pmau... at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>  The fact is, I know the man would force me to pay for the chocolate, so in
>>> some cases that enters into the equation and keeps me from wanting the
>>> chocolate.
>>
>> If the man said, "please take the chocolate, but I want you to share
>> it with your friends", and you refused to do so because you couldn't
>> accept that condition, would it be right to say, "that man is forcing
>> me to share chocolate with my friends"?
> 
> But the thing is, he's *not* making me share the chocolate with any of
> my friends.  He's not even making me share my special peanut butter
> and chocolate.  What he's making me do is, if I give my peanut butter
> and chocolate to one of my friends, he's making me make *that* friend
> promise to share.  I try not to impose obligations like that on my
> friends, so obviously the "nice" man with the chocolate isn't my
> friend!

The analogy breaks here; unlike chocolate, the value of software/source
code, if shared, doesn't decrease (in fact, many software increases its
value when shared liberally, e.g. p2p apps).

There might be certain cases where the software contains some trade
secret whose value decreases the more people knows about it; but sharing
does not decrease the value of the software, at least not directly, it
is the value of the secret that decreases because of the sharing.



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