[CentOS-devel] First round of RHEL programs announced

Sun Jan 24 02:25:45 UTC 2021
Lamar Owen <lowen at pari.edu>

On 1/23/21 6:55 AM, redbaronbrowser via CentOS-devel wrote:
> On Friday, January 22, 2021 4:38 PM, redbaronbrowser via CentOS-devel 
> <centos-devel at centos.org> wrote:
>>
>> Just to clarify, you mean we should avoid redistributing RPMs not 
>> covered by the GPL/LGPL, right?
>>
>> For RPMs that are covered by the GPL and LGPL, it should not violate 
>> any agreement to redistribute those to anyone?  As long as the form 
>> of redistribution doesn't claim the receiver is entitled to Red Hat 
>> support, anyone is entitled to the GPL/LGPL covered RPMs?
>
> Mike McGrath, I find it troubling a VP level member of Red Hat, Inc. 
> might be implying there exist people that are unentitled to GPL/LGPL 
> covered works.  If you don't mind, I would like to see if I can get a 
> member of the Free Software Foundation involved.

So, the way I read the subscription agreement and interpret it for 
myself and myself alone (that is, this is not legal advice and I am not 
a lawyer), redistributing material (any material, not just RPMs or SRPMs 
but things like subscriptin-only bugzilla content, kernel patchset 
reasons, etc) from my active Red Hat Enterprise Linux subscription is 
grounds for termination by Red Hat of my access to subscription 
content.  They can't take away what I already have, but they can take 
away my ability to access future subscription content.

In a nutshell: my interpretation for myself and myself alone is that I 
am free to redistribute the GPL-covered packages.  Red Hat is also free 
to refuse to continue to do business with me. I thus make the choice to 
not redistribute.

GPL does NOT require distribution to the public software that is 
distributed for a fee ( 
https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-faq.en.html#DoesTheGPLRequireAvailabilityToPublic 
).  If you do actually get a FSF staff member involved, they will 
probably tell you the same thing.

Quoting Bradley Kuhn in a 2011 posting ( 
http://ebb.org/bkuhn/blog/2011/03/05/open-core-slur.html ): " I do have 
strong, negative opinions about the RHEL business model; I have long 
called it the "if you like copyleft, your money is no good here" 
business model. It's a GPL-compliant business model merely because the 
GPL is silent on whether or not you must keep someone as your customer. 
Red Hat tells RHEL customers that if they chose to engage in their 
rights under GPL, then their support contract will be canceled. I've 
often pointed out (although this may be the first time publicly on the 
Internet) that Red Hat found a bright line of GPL compliance, walked 
right up to it, and were the first to stake out a business model right 
on the line." (and the followup post at 
http://ebb.org/bkuhn/blog/2011/03/11/linux-red-hat-gpl.html is a good read)