[ale] Online Presentation Service
James P. Kinney III
jkinney at localnetsolutions.com
Mon Jun 24 09:22:22 EDT 2002
It seems there is no legal ground in the software licensing world. The
publisher/write/controlling entity can put whatever terms the $&%^ want
in the license as long as the terms do not compel the user to commit
illegal acts to stay in compliance with the license.
It is a system that needs lots of public debate followed by some
intelligent (for a change) legislation.
On Mon, 2002-06-24 at 09:05, Geoffrey wrote:
> James P. Kinney III wrote:
> > If I recall correctly, M$ banned the use of open-source software for
> > remote access and control of M$ systems.
>
> What possible legal grounds could they have?
>
>
> --
> Until later: Geoffrey esoteric at 3times25.net
>
> I didn't have to buy my radio from a specific company to listen
> to FM, why doesn't that apply to the Internet (anymore...)?
>
>
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--
James P. Kinney III \Changing the mobile computing world/
President and CEO \ one Linux user /
Local Net Solutions,LLC \ at a time. /
770-493-8244 \.___________________________./
GPG ID: 829C6CA7 James P. Kinney III (M.S. Physics)
<jkinney at localnetsolutions.com>
Fingerprint = 3C9E 6366 54FC A3FE BA4D 0659 6190 ADC3 829C 6CA7
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