Shane M. Coughlan shane@shaneland.co.uk forwarded: [...]
Software patents attack the freedom of all software developers and users; their only legitimate use is to deter aggression using software patents. [...]
Even that use is only legitimate within certain limits: a software licence should not terminate because of acts near-totally unrelated to the licensed software and the licensee; and a copyright licence should not terminate because of patent problems.
Terminating for unrelated acts is a problem - it is similar to the bad old licences that say the licensee may not offer support services, or must pet a cat before copying the software.
Terminating the copyright licence because of patent disputes is a problem because it can import effects of the USA's bad patent law and lawsuit-happy culture into other countries. The FSF has often argued against confusing different so-called "Intellectual Property" laws, so why this U-turn by putting patent and copyright terms in one licence?
"These laws have so little in common, and differ so much, that it is ill-advised to generalize about them." (in http://www.fsf.org/licensing/essays/words-to-avoid.html - see also http://www.fsf.org/licensing/essays/not-ipr.xhtml )
[...]
I think it's well worth visiting http://gplv3.fsf.org and signing up to the list to get stuff like this.
It's marginal value IMO. No open discussion is allowed on that list and the useful stuff is reposted in other public forums.
The GPLv3 process is not as open as it should be. Some useful things are only in formats like PDF, rather than plain text or html, there are browser and email client requirements to meet before participating in the comment system (even for reading) and the form of comments is limited to ones linked to short sections of the draft. I will retry the email interface soon because I have changed my mail client, but the instructions http://gplv3.fsf.org/comments/email.html make it pretty clear that I am a third-class participant, required to ensure things which I have no way of ensuring, so I offer the above concerns in this public forum, in case anyone else will ask them first.
The current GPLv3 comment system should be junked before the end of the process and replaced with a more common email+web-forum-based moderated consultation which is open to all hackers with the most basic software.
Regards,