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Re: [libreplanet-discuss] suggestion/help. GPL enforcement.


From: Pen-Yuan Hsing
Subject: Re: [libreplanet-discuss] suggestion/help. GPL enforcement.
Date: Mon, 6 Jun 2016 23:08:31 +0100
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.3; WOW64; rv:45.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/45.1.1

On 2016-06-06 20:42, John Sullivan wrote:
al3xu5 / dotcommon <dotcommon@autistici.org> writes:

If copyright laws didn't exist, then we would not need GPL!
GPL exists just to "circumvent" copyright...
Regards

Unfortunately that's not the case. It's true that the GPL uses the power
of copyright against copyright, but it also uses copyright to protect
users against non-copyright aggression, including EULAs and patents. If
copyright went away first, we would have no GPL (in its current
incarnation), and proprietary restrictions on software and its
distribution could still be enforced using EULAs (contracts).

-john

So to confirm: Proprietary software's EULAs are completely *independent* of 
copyright? If so are EULAs just enforced as any other contract without the 
power of copyright? If so, would it make any difference if software patents 
also didn't exist?

Sorry I just want to understand this completely!



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