FireFox 3 EULA
Antonio Olivares
olivares14031 at yahoo.com
Mon Sep 15 12:07:09 UTC 2008
--- On Mon, 9/15/08, Steve Hill <steve at nexusuk.org> wrote:
> From: Steve Hill <steve at nexusuk.org>
> Subject: Re: FireFox 3 EULA
> To: "Community assistance, encouragement, and advice for using Fedora." <fedora-list at redhat.com>
> Date: Monday, September 15, 2008, 5:01 AM
> On Mon, 15 Sep 2008, Joel Rees wrote:
>
> > Did you read it?
>
> Yep.
>
> > Some apps show you a EULA for the GPL when they
> install. And if you can7t
> > agree to the GPL, you can click disagree and refrain
> from installing.
>
> The GPL is not an EULA - the end user is not required to
> agree to it in
> order to use the software. In fact, requiring the user to
> agree to any
> licence (GPL or otherwise) before they can use a piece
> GPLed software is
> itself a breach of the GPL.
>
> > My memory of the FireFox EULA is that it's
> basically the same thing, but with
> > the Mozilla license.
>
> Again, the Mozilla license is not an EULA - the end user is
> not required
> to agree to it in order to use the software.
>
> > I don't remember what the name of the
> > group that claims to define open source is, but they
> also have a bit to say
> > about such things.
>
> The FSF define the four freedoms. The first of those is
> "The freedom to
> run the program, for any purpose" which clearly an
> EULA would prevent
> since it places restrictions on exactly what you can do
> with the software.
>
> > Sure, a dialogue where you have to click a button that
> says you read the
> > license is a bit of a pain, and is a bit against the
> real concepts of freedom
> > of thought, but when we have people who would like to
> treat all open source
> > and free software licenses like the 1-clause BSD
> license, it may not be
> > unreasonable for the authors to try to get a little
> bit in the face of the
> > users about the responsibilities of freedom.
>
> Could you explain what purpose you believe an EULA serves?
>
> Could you also explain how you believe an EULA can be
> enforcable, given
> that you can never prove someone agreed (maybe they hacked
> it out of the
> software so they didn't have to click the "I
> agree" button, or maybe
> someone else or their cat agreed to it). This isn't
> some signed bit of
> paper where you can prove that a specific person signed it
> - it is a
> button on a bit of software which you are assuming a
> specific person
> clicked without having any evidence to support it.
>
> > If the EULA goes beyond the "approved"
> free/open versions of the Mozilla
> > license, you may have something to worry about. Do
> you think that's the
> > case?
>
> No, the EULA is quite clear that it only applies to the
> official version,
> which is why IceWeasel isn't covered.
>
> - Steve
> xmpp:steve at nexusuk.org sip:steve at nexusuk.org
> http://www.nexusuk.org/
>
> Servatis a periculum, servatis a maleficum - Whisper,
> Evanescence
>
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Thought this was somewhat related to the thread:
Fedora ain't playin' around w/Firefox 3
http://linux.derkeiler.com/Mailing-Lists/Fedora/2008-06/msg02165.html
Regards,
Antonio
http://fedoraproject.org/static/firefox/
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