Re: PGPsdk is now free for non-commercial use
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At 06:53 PM 11/16/97 -0800, Lucky Green wrote:
At 06:25 PM 11/16/97 -0800, Bill Stewart wrote:
I'm pleased to see PGP Inc. permitting development of freeware, but at leased from a first reading of the license, it's a _really_ restrictive definition of "freeware" - not only does the software have to be free, but it can only be used in extremely restrictively non-commercial activities.
The idea is simple: you make money from software that costs the authors lots of money to develop or use their software in a business environment (=to make money), you have to pay the people that spent time, effort, and, yes, money, on making it happen.
Sounds reasonable to me.
I can see where they want to make a profit, but the licence makes the software virtually undistributable by normal shareware channels.
From what I have read of the license it is against the license agreement to ship the libraries on a CD of shareware products for which a price is charged.
If I were to create a program using the libraries and upload them to Simtel or one of the other big archives, it could not be distributed on a Simtel CD-ROM that someone was charging money for. (Ignoring the usual export issues.) I see this as a big problem. --- | "That'll make it hot for them!" - Guy Grand | |"The moral PGP Diffie taught Zimmermann unites all| Disclaimer: | | mankind free in one-key-steganography-privacy!" | Ignore the man | |`finger -l alano@teleport.com` for PGP 2.6.2 key | behind the keyboard.| | http://www.ctrl-alt-del.com/~alan/ |alan@ctrl-alt-del.com|
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At 08:01 PM 11/16/97 -0800, Lucky Green wrote:
At 07:47 PM 11/16/97 -0800, Alan Olsen wrote:
From what I have read of the license it is against the license agreement to ship the libraries on a CD of shareware products for which a price is charged.
o There is typically an exemption in license agreements for distribution of software that charges nominal media costs. If PGP overlooked this, it can be added trivially. No need to get excited about it.
I know that, you know that, but do the lawyers know that? Shareware and freeware share the same distribution channels, so it is a problem for freeware until the licence gets upgraded.
o The current license agreement for the PGPsdk is for use freeware only. The license agreement for shareware has not yet been made public (=been written).
I know that. I just find the current versions on the licence agreement to be not well thought out. I expect similar problems to be found in the shareware licence. By version 2.x of the license agreement, I expect it to be something that will not make problems for freeware/shareware developers. [Note: I am not claiming consipracy or illwill by PGP in this matter. This stuff just reads like the lawyers had not quite enough understanding of the issues when they wrote this. Could be worse, Borland has had some pretty unworkable license restrictions. And I won't even get into Microsoft...] --- | "That'll make it hot for them!" - Guy Grand | |"The moral PGP Diffie taught Zimmermann unites all| Disclaimer: | | mankind free in one-key-steganography-privacy!" | Ignore the man | |`finger -l alano@teleport.com` for PGP 2.6.2 key | behind the keyboard.| | http://www.ctrl-alt-del.com/~alan/ |alan@ctrl-alt-del.com|
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At 08:01 PM 11/16/1997 -0800, Lucky Green wrote:
At 07:47 PM 11/16/97 -0800, Alan Olsen wrote:
From what I have read of the license it is against the license agreement to ship the libraries on a CD of shareware products for which a price is charged.
o There is typically an exemption in license agreements for distribution of software that charges nominal media costs. If PGP overlooked this, it can be added trivially. No need to get excited about it.
I assume it was deliberate - it goes out of its way to say that you can't use it to generate revenues, directly or indirectly, and even including it on a disk of freeware that you sell would appear to count, as would providing the free widget for free download on a web page with commercial advertising banners. It's far more restrictive than the previous PGP policies, and not being able to use it in my office building is even more annoying than not being able to use it to encrypt work email.
o The current license agreement for the PGPsdk is for use freeware only. The license agreement for shareware has not yet been made public (=been written).
I'm not bothered by the freeware permissions not applying to shareware; it would be nice if they negotiate a low enough price for shareware authors to use, but if you're going to make money off their code, I don't mind if PGP wants their cut. Thanks! Bill Bill Stewart, stewarts@ix.netcom.com Regular Key PGP Fingerprint D454 E202 CBC8 40BF 3C85 B884 0ABE 4639
participants (2)
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Alan Olsen
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Bill Stewart