On 1/24/21 12:28 PM, redbaronbrowser via CentOS-devel wrote:
I see it as damaging to Red Hat in the long run sending the message that GPL/LGPL rights respected by CentOS should be disregarded by users when agreeing to the "better" 16 RHEL licenses. The attitude of Red Hat should not be that people will continue to contribute to free software projects regardless of how RH uses the term "unentitled."
They have been straddling this fence since RHEL was first made, and, to the best of my knowledge, the RHEL subscription contract has not been tested in court (I've not combed PACER for it, though). Someone would have to violate their contract AND then have their subscription revoked due to breach of contract AND then sue Red Hat for the subscription termination. This would be a long, involved, and costly process. And this is the only way to really settle the issue of whether GPL prohibits restrictions on the redistribution of object code derivative works.
Back to the word you took exception to; in RHEL-speak, 'unentitled' means a server that doesn't have an 'entitlement' through subscription-manager. It doesn't refer to third-parties, but to the second party's server. That was the context for the use of the word, that of a server using the binary RPMs for mock buildroots but run by someone with a subscription. At least that was my understanding of the word given the context.