From the Croquet welcome page we can read:
http://www.opencroquet.org/index.php/Main_Page "Croquet is a powerful new open source software development environment and software infrastructure for creating and deploying deeply collaborative multi-user online applications and metaverses on and across multiple operating systems and devices. Derived from Squeak, it features a peer-based network architecture that supports communication, collaboration, resource sharing, and synchronous computation between multiple users on multiple devices." Interesting part is: "Croquet is derived from Squeak" Then Croquet license is pretty clear http://www.opencroquet.org/index.php/The_Croquet_License According to this information, Squeak has already been relicensed since 2002. Or is it a violation of the copyright laws? Anyway 6 years without a legal suit and even Intel, business angel investing money on this technology. Any though on that... Hilaire |
Hilaire Fernandes wrote:
> From the Croquet welcome page we can read: > > http://www.opencroquet.org/index.php/Main_Page > > "Croquet is a powerful new open source software development environment > and software infrastructure for creating and deploying deeply > collaborative multi-user online applications and metaverses on and > across multiple operating systems and devices. Derived from Squeak, it > features a peer-based network architecture that supports communication, > collaboration, resource sharing, and synchronous computation between > multiple users on multiple devices." > > Interesting part is: "Croquet is derived from Squeak" You should realize that the above is marketing, not legal speak. > Then Croquet license is pretty clear > http://www.opencroquet.org/index.php/The_Croquet_License > > According to this information, Squeak has already been relicensed since > 2002. Or is it a violation of the copyright laws? No, it's just a misinterpretation. Croquet is an SDK (a library) and only preloaded in those images for convenience. You can just take the Homebase.image and load whichever combination of Croquet packages you like (this is the very reason why it's there). But it changes nothing about the license of the code in Homebase.image which for the most part is Squeak-L (until the point where we can get a clean heritage to change it to MIT). > Anyway 6 years without a legal suit and even Intel, business angel > investing money on this technology. > > Any though on that... To my knowledge there has never been a problem with Squeak-L in commercial settings. All of my last four companies used Squeak under Squeak-L for commercial products and that includes both huge places like Disney (which is known for its notorious interpretations of IP and copyright) and HP, as well as small places like Impara or Qwaq. It's only the uber-freedom guys (Debian etc) who have a problem with Squeak-L; in commercial settings Squeak-L is quite acceptable. Cheers, - Andreas |
On Mon, Mar 24, 2008 at 09:16:53PM -0700, Andreas Raab wrote:
> To my knowledge there has never been a problem with Squeak-L in commercial > settings. All of my last four companies used Squeak under Squeak-L for > commercial products and that includes both huge places like Disney (which > is known for its notorious interpretations of IP and copyright) and HP, as > well as small places like Impara or Qwaq. > > It's only the uber-freedom guys (Debian etc) who have a problem with > Squeak-L; in commercial settings Squeak-L is quite acceptable. The major reason we are changing the license is to get into the Software Freedom Conservancy. -- Matthew Fulmer -- http://mtfulmer.wordpress.com/ |
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