On Monday 28. August 2017 12.26.34 Fabian Keil wrote:
Jonas Oberg jonas@fsfe.org wrote:
I'm referring to 'commercial utilization' as used in the context of what Moritz quoted.
Thank you. I think the context is a bit muddled as it somehow seems to suggest the GPL is unsuitable for commercial utilization. There are certainly differences in what stance countries take on the issue, but we should make clear all countries, big and small, benefit from copyleft licenses.
... and other free software licenses.
Well, yes, but let us try and avoid drawing this out over lots of messages because the original context keeps getting lost. The assertion in the text quoted from the book "The Comingled Code" was...
"For instance, a small country might want to take advantage of further improvements by others to its software and would be more inclined to fund open source projects with licenses that limit commercial utilization, such as the General Public License."
The objection that started this discussion was about the assertion that the GPL limits "commercial utilization" (as meant by the authors). Now, the GPL does prevent the "easy money" approach of welding the lid shut and sticking a price tag on the box, and this approach then becomes unavailable to certain kinds of commercial entities. This is indeed a "limit" on a specific form of "commercial utilization".
But this "limit" does not mean that other activities are curtailed or that other ways of making money aren't even created by the need to provide the sources under the GPL, particularly when the obligation involves recipients who can be (and may only be) paying customers. And although what the authors wrote can be consistent with what I have just written, much depends on one's own perceptions.
For many people, the production of proprietary software is somehow equated to "commercial utilization" because such people cannot understand how anyone would otherwise make money from software. So, they claim that the GPL is "non- commercial" or "anti-commercial", when what it actually does is to prevent one specific business model.
Now, maybe the authors do not support such false equivalences, but even so, random members of the public who have not read the book may well jump to erroneous conclusions if they are presented with things like the quoted statement in isolation. That is presumably why the objection was raised.
The following sentence from the quoted text is informative about the mindset behind notions of commercialisation:
"In a large country with a dynamic software industry, government officials may wish to make it easier for commercial firms to benefit from publicly funded research and development."
What we now see in the public sector, or in institutions performing a public service (such as academic institutions that may be private in some cases), is the idea that public money should encourage or initiate "innovation". This often seems to take the form of letting companies profit from work done for the public good, and it is often excused or explained as a way of "stimulating the economy".
One argument that is made is that it provides a way of assisting local companies against foreign competition, and that the money made from such works will provide tax revenues instead of going abroad. But what ends up happening is that the public ends up paying over and over again for such works, and such works end up being exploitative towards the average person.
So, as Adonay mentioned, the average person ends up having to use proprietary tax software that may only work on certain proprietary platforms, and they may even have to pay substantial sums to be able to use all of this. And so, the "benefits" seem to get channeled to certain people and not to others, all in the name of "business".
Meanwhile, there are arguments that publicly-funded works might be used to reduce costs for the average person, to eliminate profiteering around commercial distractions, and to direct entrepreneurs towards activities that provide greater benefits to society.
Paul
P.S. Note that permissive licences do let people take publicly-funded code, deny people the source code, and charge money for the result. Such licences would guarantee "public code" only in its initial form.