2019-01-23 18:20:08

by linuxgpletc

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: GRSec is vital to Linux security

There are two iron laws when it comes to the linux-kernel and it's
facing towards the larger world.

1) The grsecurity-pax patch is absolutely vital if one wishes to not be
hacked by chinese(TM). (And has been vital for the last 15+ years.)

2) GRSecurity is _blatantly_ violating the GPL by adding additional
restrictive terms.


Other things we have come to know is that
A) Linus is a poor judge of quality, or just out of touch.

To say that GRSecurity is garbage?
No linus, it's just the layer covering up the shit heap that the
linux-kernel is when it comes to exploitable code.
That stench you smell is not that nice grassy cover over the garbage
tip, it is what is below, what that top is holding down.

You know... I would expect the things that Linus said about GRSecurity
from a white woman... I would expect that. Knowing nothing, spouting
bullshit, destroying lives. That's their _thing_.

But from a man?

Well, goes to show you. White men ain't men. Best they are is 40 year
old bois. Faggots to say for short in American parlance.

Same reason they won't hold it down when a bunch of fucking cunts CoC
them. You build the whole edifice, then you let a bunch of do-nothing
white women rule over the thing you built and you.

But hey, that's Linux!


2019-01-23 20:47:36

by Ivan Ivanov

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: GRSec is vital to Linux security

Interesting point of view. Well, to be honest it seems to me that
Linux kernel sacrifices the security for the sake of progress, so it
is quite bloated at the moment and I am not sure that even GRSecurity
could fix it. Linux really needs to stop adding new features and
refactor itself to a smaller and more secure codebase before going
forward. Maybe 1 year break would be nice.

ср, 23 янв. 2019 г. в 21:22, <[email protected]>:
>
> There are two iron laws when it comes to the linux-kernel and it's
> facing towards the larger world.
>
> 1) The grsecurity-pax patch is absolutely vital if one wishes to not be
> hacked by chinese(TM). (And has been vital for the last 15+ years.)
>
> 2) GRSecurity is _blatantly_ violating the GPL by adding additional
> restrictive terms.
>
>
> Other things we have come to know is that
> A) Linus is a poor judge of quality, or just out of touch.
>
> To say that GRSecurity is garbage?
> No linus, it's just the layer covering up the shit heap that the
> linux-kernel is when it comes to exploitable code.
> That stench you smell is not that nice grassy cover over the garbage
> tip, it is what is below, what that top is holding down.
>
> You know... I would expect the things that Linus said about GRSecurity
> from a white woman... I would expect that. Knowing nothing, spouting
> bullshit, destroying lives. That's their _thing_.
>
> But from a man?
>
> Well, goes to show you. White men ain't men. Best they are is 40 year
> old bois. Faggots to say for short in American parlance.
>
> Same reason they won't hold it down when a bunch of fucking cunts CoC
> them. You build the whole edifice, then you let a bunch of do-nothing
> white women rule over the thing you built and you.
>
> But hey, that's Linux!

2019-01-23 22:29:10

by linuxgpletc

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: GRSec is vital to Linux security

On 2019-01-23 20:46, Ivan Ivanov wrote:
> Interesting point of view. Well, to be honest it seems to me that
> Linux kernel sacrifices the security for the sake of progress, so it
> is quite bloated at the moment and I am not sure that even GRSecurity
> could fix it. Linux really needs to stop adding new features and
> refactor itself to a smaller and more secure codebase before going
> forward. Maybe 1 year break would be nice.

This man speaks the truth. The constant flux reintroduces long-fixed
bugs, like a constant inflowing tide. The code can never be stabilized
due to the endless needless work of the worker-bee wage-slaves. Thus the
code always has new hidden security errors.

GRSecurity can barely keep up.

A "feature" of the wage-slave era of Linux, that we did not have in the
Hacker era of Linux (the people targeted by the CoC, who actually
created the land where the wage-slave code churners now graze)

"Free" workers from for-profit and government connected enterprises do
not come with no-strings-attached, and the enterprises are not stupid:
they refactor to get their way if an initial strategy isn't working.

The only real flux of any significant magnitude that should occur is
with the addition of new drivers. Instead code is ripped out and
replaced everywhere for little to no real gain.

That being said... GRSecurity's GPL violation is the most blatant
upfront violation of the GPL I've ever seen (they put it in writing and
don't try to hide it (you redistribute, we punish you)).

They also do not deal with small businesses or people who would like to
purchase a "license" from them. Only large businesses and government
contracts.

They're afraid that a small company would pay for 1 server "license" and
then release the code, I think.

Some people wonder why hasn't anyone penetrated their Download server
and stolen the code back and released it?

Maybe because GRSecurity knows what they're doing. If it were hosted on
a vanilla linux server, it would be out by now.

Remember: it's been well over a year. Not one leak of the code, not one
penetration, nothing. They know how to secure a linux machine. Linus
does not. He just allows endless useless flux, barely manages the
project, places it all in the hands of the wage-slaves (who simply do
their job for their company, not for the betterment of the thing (no
passion)) and ousts the old Hackers who built the thing with Linus from
the ground up originally.

Legal action could be taken to stop GrSecurity's blatant violation; one
could atleast sue for the profits. It is a non-seperable work, they are
violating the "no additional restrictions" rule, in writing. They
violated the copyright - it's as simple as that in the end.

No one does a thing. Ofcourse the wage-slaves do not: they don't own
their own code and don't have agency even over their own lives anyway.
Their bosses could do something though, the companies that own the
wage-slave's code. The Hackers, who's code still resides in the linux
kernel AND/OR who's code was a predecessor of current code (even if it
is not the same as their original code) also have standing.

Nothing is done. It's as if the GPL is just worthless trash. It has not
stopped GRSecurity from closing their derivative work of the kernel and
threatening anyone who would redistribute the non-separable derivative
work. They just laugh at Linus, the Hackers, and especially the
wage-slaves.

Didn't someone once say "Linux will be free forever" (hint: Lawrence
Rosen). A piece of Linux isn't now... It hasn't panned out in reality.



Subject: Re: GRSec is vital to Linux security

On 23.01.19 21:46, Ivan Ivanov wrote:

> Linux really needs to stop adding new features and
> refactor itself to a smaller and more secure codebase before going
> forward. Maybe 1 year break would be nice.

Do you have some actual proposals / patches ?


--mtx

--
Enrico Weigelt, metux IT consult
Free software and Linux embedded engineering
[email protected] -- +49-151-27565287

2019-01-24 16:06:06

by Adam Borowski

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: GRSec is vital to Linux security

On Thu, Jan 24, 2019 at 04:31:10PM +0100, Enrico Weigelt, metux IT consult wrote:
> On 23.01.19 21:46, Ivan Ivanov wrote:
>
> > Linux really needs to stop adding new features and
> > refactor itself to a smaller and more secure codebase before going
> > forward. Maybe 1 year break would be nice.
>
> Do you have some actual proposals / patches ?

Enrico, you're responding to a notorious troll. If you haven't noticed,
this "Ivan Ivanov" sock puppet is a persona of some bastard who talks to
him/herself while tarnishing the name of our dear friend MikeeUSA (a true
pillar of the community!). His/her methods evolve, but the gist is the
same. Expect bringing up a bogus but semi-plausible controversy in order
to start as big a thread as possible, then once people who this bastard
wants to attack have joined, try to equate their position in the public view
with statements such as:

(Excuse the quotation, please wipe your monitor afterwards.)

# But from a man?
#
# Well, goes to show you. White men ain't men. Best they are is 40 year
# old bois. Faggots to say for short in American parlance.
#
# Same reason they won't hold it down when a bunch of fucking cunts CoC
# them. You build the whole edifice, then you let a bunch of do-nothing
# white women rule over the thing you built and you.

And this has been going for quite a while.

Connecting to systemd threads doesn't seem to work any longer, as people on
debian-user vs dng have wisened up. Same with license rescinsion threads.
What you read is just a yet another attempt to stir up some excrement.
Don't let any of it spray on you. Because that's the fake-Mikee's way.


Meow!
--
⢀⣴⠾⠻⢶⣦⠀
⣾⠁⢠⠒⠀⣿⡁ Remember, the S in "IoT" stands for Security, while P stands
⢿⡄⠘⠷⠚⠋⠀ for Privacy.
⠈⠳⣄⠀⠀⠀⠀

2019-01-24 16:22:28

by linuxgpletc

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: GRSec is vital to Linux security

On 2019-01-24 15:31, Enrico Weigelt, metux IT consult wrote:
> Do you have some actual proposals / patches ?

Sue Open Source Security / Bradly Spengler for copyright infringement.
Seek his profits as damages. I doubt you'll be able to get specific
performance since the GPL is not a contact in this instance. (If you
registered your copyright prior to the violation you can alternatively
go for statutory damages + attoneys fees btw)

He is _blatantly_ violating your copyright by adding an additional
restrictive term regarding the distribution of his non-separable
derivative work of the linux kernel code.

2019-01-24 16:32:18

by linuxgpletc

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: GRSec is vital to Linux security -- SFConservancy = legal malpractice. Use own lawyer.

One note: If you are going to defend your copyrights and the idea of the
GPL, do not rely on the "free software legal groups".

The "free software legal groups" exist only to commit legal malpractice.

The guy who ran the SFConservancy (Bradly Kuhn IIRC) isn't even a
lawyer. He advises "clients" to wait it out: AKA run down the
statute-of-limitations so you have no case.

A fucking _FAGGOT_.

You cannot rely on the "Free software legal groups" to help you because
_they do not exist_.

Only recently did the SFConservancy hire a lawyer, and they had to put
her in the head position because Bar rules do not allow a lawyer to be
below non-lawyers in a legal firm.

Just wanted to let you know.

2019-01-24 16:41:42

by linuxgpletc

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Fwd: Re: GRSec is vital to Linux security


-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Re: GRSec is vital to Linux security
Date: 2019-01-24 16:25
From: Boris Lukashev <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]

You've never heard of VMware, I take it? Its a proprietary half Linux
which beats GPL suits with strong arm tactics and technicalities. Unlike
grsec, they don't distribute any source, because it's proof of theft...
Grsecs back port work is also public, since they're public upstream
patches or mailing list patches, the GCC plugins are the real magic...
Those aren't as GPL as the kernel, rap is patented, respectre likely
will be as well. The critical code changes they need (per CPU PGD, for
one) will not be accepted as Linus has "said so." Those code bits are
out there...

Also, doesn't matter if their patch leaks for the most part (4.4 just
did get leaked a few weeks back), as I wrote before, nobody really has
the time or skill available to maintain at their level of quality...
Linux might be free, but it's not something that should be run in
production when there's data or resource at stake.

Is the thought process that they should open up their commercial stable
code for free to all? Because RHEL has the same "don't leak" policy on
RHEL sources too... VMware even goes so far as to blatantly claim not to
use Linux. How about Google's internal Linux?

GPL is dead (has been for 20y), build the strongest defenses you can
with whatever code you can get and prove, because your adversaries won't
care about which license clause their tooling adheres to.

Boris Lukashev
Systems Architect
Semper Victus

-------- Original Message --------
From: [email protected]
Sent: Wednesday, January 23, 2019 05:35 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: GRSec is vital to Linux security
CC:
[email protected],[email protected],[email protected],[email protected],[email protected],[email protected]

2019-01-24 16:56:07

by linuxgpletc

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: GRSec is vital to Linux security

There is ample standing to sue. GRSec made it's "access agreement"
public,
which included terms to prevent redistribution (if you redistribute, we
punish you). Which is a direct violation of the "no additional
restrictive terms"
clause in the GPL.

Why won't anyone bring a copyright lawsuit?

Are they happy that GRSec gets to use their code, and prevent anyone
from
freeing the derivative work? The whole point of the GPL is that
derivative
works be under the same terms.

Bradly Spengler has violated this understanding, he thinks that his code
doesn't need to be under the same terms. The code which is simply a
derivative work of the linux kernel.

There is a valid, actionable case here.

Any of the programmers / copyright owners who's code he modified can sue
him.
He is violating their terms of use of their software.
He is in the USA. It's not difficult. Just SUE.

Just because VMWare does things one doesn't like doesn't mean you cannot
sue
Bradly Spengler.

Another thing is, the "Free software" legal "representation" is trash.
The SFConservancy was run for the longest time by a non-lawyer BKuhn.

He advised "clients" to WAIT it out! And then.. guess what they have
waiting years?
No case because the statute of limitations had been passed.

That's how that baby-faced moron has "helped" the free software legal
cause.

You guys need to hire real IP lawyers, not bullshit pretenders.
And if Bradly is making money, and enough of it, you might have profits
you could target.

I kinda think that the "Free software legal" teams exist only to diffuse
valid suits,
and stymie the guys who actually wrote the code and retained their
copyrights.

Pure legal malpractice by any accounting.

On 2019-01-24 16:25, Boris Lukashev wrote:
> You've never heard of VMware, I take it? Its a proprietary half Linux
> which beats GPL suits with strong arm tactics and technicalities.
> Unlike grsec, they don't distribute any source, because it's proof of
> theft... Grsecs back port work is also public, since they're public
> upstream patches or mailing list patches, the GCC plugins are the real
> magic... Those aren't as GPL as the kernel, rap is patented, respectre
> likely will be as well. The critical code changes they need (per CPU
> PGD, for one) will not be accepted as Linus has "said so." Those code
> bits are out there...
>
> Also, doesn't matter if their patch leaks for the most part (4.4 just
> did get leaked a few weeks back), as I wrote before, nobody really has
> the time or skill available to maintain at their level of quality...
> Linux might be free, but it's not something that should be run in
> production when there's data or resource at stake.
>
> Is the thought process that they should open up their commercial
> stable code for free to all? Because RHEL has the same "don't leak"
> policy on RHEL sources too... VMware even goes so far as to blatantly
> claim not to use Linux. How about Google's internal Linux?
>
> GPL is dead (has been for 20y), build the strongest defenses you can
> with whatever code you can get and prove, because your adversaries
> won't care about which license clause their tooling adheres to.
>
> Boris Lukashev
> Systems Architect
> Semper Victus
>
> -------- Original Message --------
> From: [email protected]
> Sent: Wednesday, January 23, 2019 05:35 PM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: GRSec is vital to Linux security
> CC:
> [email protected],[email protected],[email protected],[email protected],[email protected],[email protected]

2019-01-24 20:19:21

by Boris Lukashev

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: GRSec is vital to Linux security

Sue to what end? Force them to freely distribute their work/give up
all those hours of backports/integration and actual invention? The
only thing a suit could achieve is to prevent them from doing any work
at all as you cant force someone to work for free (in the US, under
most circumstances). No contributor will be able to prove quantifiable
material damages, and the outcomes are between destruction of the only
Linux vendor who puts priority on security or a waste of money and
time in the lawsuit. Only the lawyers benefit, everyone else loses out
directly or indirectly. Are you a lawyer, acting on behalf of someone
interested in slowing the progress of defensive technologies, or just
miss the days when being as script kiddie made people feel powerful?

On Thu, Jan 24, 2019 at 11:54 AM <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> There is ample standing to sue. GRSec made it's "access agreement"
> public,
> which included terms to prevent redistribution (if you redistribute, we
> punish you). Which is a direct violation of the "no additional
> restrictive terms"
> clause in the GPL.
>
> Why won't anyone bring a copyright lawsuit?
>
> Are they happy that GRSec gets to use their code, and prevent anyone
> from
> freeing the derivative work? The whole point of the GPL is that
> derivative
> works be under the same terms.
>
> Bradly Spengler has violated this understanding, he thinks that his code
> doesn't need to be under the same terms. The code which is simply a
> derivative work of the linux kernel.
>
> There is a valid, actionable case here.
>
> Any of the programmers / copyright owners who's code he modified can sue
> him.
> He is violating their terms of use of their software.
> He is in the USA. It's not difficult. Just SUE.
>
> Just because VMWare does things one doesn't like doesn't mean you cannot
> sue
> Bradly Spengler.
>
> Another thing is, the "Free software" legal "representation" is trash.
> The SFConservancy was run for the longest time by a non-lawyer BKuhn.
>
> He advised "clients" to WAIT it out! And then.. guess what they have
> waiting years?
> No case because the statute of limitations had been passed.
>
> That's how that baby-faced moron has "helped" the free software legal
> cause.
>
> You guys need to hire real IP lawyers, not bullshit pretenders.
> And if Bradly is making money, and enough of it, you might have profits
> you could target.
>
> I kinda think that the "Free software legal" teams exist only to diffuse
> valid suits,
> and stymie the guys who actually wrote the code and retained their
> copyrights.
>
> Pure legal malpractice by any accounting.
>
> On 2019-01-24 16:25, Boris Lukashev wrote:
> > You've never heard of VMware, I take it? Its a proprietary half Linux
> > which beats GPL suits with strong arm tactics and technicalities.
> > Unlike grsec, they don't distribute any source, because it's proof of
> > theft... Grsecs back port work is also public, since they're public
> > upstream patches or mailing list patches, the GCC plugins are the real
> > magic... Those aren't as GPL as the kernel, rap is patented, respectre
> > likely will be as well. The critical code changes they need (per CPU
> > PGD, for one) will not be accepted as Linus has "said so." Those code
> > bits are out there...
> >
> > Also, doesn't matter if their patch leaks for the most part (4.4 just
> > did get leaked a few weeks back), as I wrote before, nobody really has
> > the time or skill available to maintain at their level of quality...
> > Linux might be free, but it's not something that should be run in
> > production when there's data or resource at stake.
> >
> > Is the thought process that they should open up their commercial
> > stable code for free to all? Because RHEL has the same "don't leak"
> > policy on RHEL sources too... VMware even goes so far as to blatantly
> > claim not to use Linux. How about Google's internal Linux?
> >
> > GPL is dead (has been for 20y), build the strongest defenses you can
> > with whatever code you can get and prove, because your adversaries
> > won't care about which license clause their tooling adheres to.
> >
> > Boris Lukashev
> > Systems Architect
> > Semper Victus
> >
> > -------- Original Message --------
> > From: [email protected]
> > Sent: Wednesday, January 23, 2019 05:35 PM
> > To: [email protected]
> > Subject: Re: GRSec is vital to Linux security
> > CC:
> > [email protected],[email protected],[email protected],[email protected],[email protected],[email protected]



--
Boris Lukashev
Systems Architect
Semper Victus

2019-01-25 16:37:01

by linuxgpletc

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: GRSec is vital to Linux security

> Are you a lawyer,
Yes (also a programmer)
> acting on behalf of someone
No

> Sue to what end?
I wish I could say "to free the source", a court isn't going to order
specific performance where there is no contract, and there is no
contract between the Copyright owners and GRSec. Just a bare (and
revocable at will) license.

They could revoke if they didn't like Brad's face.
They can sue for damages (profits probably) since he violated the
license, and thus copyright (he would be more protected if he did have a
contract with the (C) owners: damages on his end would then more likely
simply be whatever he paid for the license)

> Force them to freely distribute their work/give up
> all those hours of backports/integration and actual invention?
I wish this were possible, but the GPL is not a contract in this
instance, so specific performance is not available. It's just a bare
license, you can get damages ($), that's all.

If the Copyright owners registered their copyrights prior to the
violation they could go for statutory damages and attorneys fees though.

So to what end...
Rage at GRSec getting off the opensource boat.
Anger at not having the security-code /slave/ we had for years.
Bellowing about how we are servants to our creed, and yet this
once-compatriot has betrayed that which we hold dear.

An attempt to use the GPL as a sword (instead of as a shield)?

Opensource works because men like being slaves. Slaves to their country,
slaves to women, slaves to an engineering field, slaves to a belief,
(and more recently: slaves to Codes of Conducts for hobby projects!).

Should not those who are still the slaves, rage against he who would use
their free labour and end his contributions back?

I think that is the entire point of "Copyleft". It's a way of getting
work that would cost millions of dollars, for free.

It works pretty well, up until 40 year old programmer has no stacy to
fuck, and no possibility of getting one.

But there's one last striving that can be done: one more needle prick
(or even knife gouge) that can be done against the escapee: and that is
a copyright lawsuit.

Since I cannot have my free leet secure kernel patch anymore... and no
one is out-in-the-open posting it in defiance of Brad (the escapee), I
would like one of the fellow slaves with standing - to sue him. In
vengeance for his betrayal of our class. They have a justiciable case,
evidence already in the hands of the courts (thanks to the libel case
(Thank you Bruce :D)).

What I really want is for GRSec to remain or return to being open and
free, like the GPL is supposed to provide.

On 2019-01-24 20:18, Boris Lukashev wrote:
> Sue to what end? Force them to freely distribute their work/give up
> all those hours of backports/integration and actual invention? The
> only thing a suit could achieve is to prevent them from doing any work
> at all as you cant force someone to work for free (in the US, under
> most circumstances). No contributor will be able to prove quantifiable
> material damages, and the outcomes are between destruction of the only
> Linux vendor who puts priority on security or a waste of money and
> time in the lawsuit. Only the lawyers benefit, everyone else loses out
> directly or indirectly. Are you a lawyer, acting on behalf of someone
> interested in slowing the progress of defensive technologies, or just
> miss the days when being as script kiddie made people feel powerful?
>
> On Thu, Jan 24, 2019 at 11:54 AM <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> There is ample standing to sue. GRSec made it's "access agreement"
>> public,
>> which included terms to prevent redistribution (if you redistribute,
>> we
>> punish you). Which is a direct violation of the "no additional
>> restrictive terms"
>> clause in the GPL.
>>
>> Why won't anyone bring a copyright lawsuit?
>>
>> Are they happy that GRSec gets to use their code, and prevent anyone
>> from
>> freeing the derivative work? The whole point of the GPL is that
>> derivative
>> works be under the same terms.
>>
>> Bradly Spengler has violated this understanding, he thinks that his
>> code
>> doesn't need to be under the same terms. The code which is simply a
>> derivative work of the linux kernel.
>>
>> There is a valid, actionable case here.
>>
>> Any of the programmers / copyright owners who's code he modified can
>> sue
>> him.
>> He is violating their terms of use of their software.
>> He is in the USA. It's not difficult. Just SUE.
>>
>> Just because VMWare does things one doesn't like doesn't mean you
>> cannot
>> sue
>> Bradly Spengler.
>>
>> Another thing is, the "Free software" legal "representation" is trash.
>> The SFConservancy was run for the longest time by a non-lawyer BKuhn.
>>
>> He advised "clients" to WAIT it out! And then.. guess what they have
>> waiting years?
>> No case because the statute of limitations had been passed.
>>
>> That's how that baby-faced moron has "helped" the free software legal
>> cause.
>>
>> You guys need to hire real IP lawyers, not bullshit pretenders.
>> And if Bradly is making money, and enough of it, you might have
>> profits
>> you could target.
>>
>> I kinda think that the "Free software legal" teams exist only to
>> diffuse
>> valid suits,
>> and stymie the guys who actually wrote the code and retained their
>> copyrights.
>>
>> Pure legal malpractice by any accounting.
>>
>> On 2019-01-24 16:25, Boris Lukashev wrote:
>> > You've never heard of VMware, I take it? Its a proprietary half Linux
>> > which beats GPL suits with strong arm tactics and technicalities.
>> > Unlike grsec, they don't distribute any source, because it's proof of
>> > theft... Grsecs back port work is also public, since they're public
>> > upstream patches or mailing list patches, the GCC plugins are the real
>> > magic... Those aren't as GPL as the kernel, rap is patented, respectre
>> > likely will be as well. The critical code changes they need (per CPU
>> > PGD, for one) will not be accepted as Linus has "said so." Those code
>> > bits are out there...
>> >
>> > Also, doesn't matter if their patch leaks for the most part (4.4 just
>> > did get leaked a few weeks back), as I wrote before, nobody really has
>> > the time or skill available to maintain at their level of quality...
>> > Linux might be free, but it's not something that should be run in
>> > production when there's data or resource at stake.
>> >
>> > Is the thought process that they should open up their commercial
>> > stable code for free to all? Because RHEL has the same "don't leak"
>> > policy on RHEL sources too... VMware even goes so far as to blatantly
>> > claim not to use Linux. How about Google's internal Linux?
>> >
>> > GPL is dead (has been for 20y), build the strongest defenses you can
>> > with whatever code you can get and prove, because your adversaries
>> > won't care about which license clause their tooling adheres to.
>> >
>> > Boris Lukashev
>> > Systems Architect
>> > Semper Victus
>> >
>> > -------- Original Message --------
>> > From: [email protected]
>> > Sent: Wednesday, January 23, 2019 05:35 PM
>> > To: [email protected]
>> > Subject: Re: GRSec is vital to Linux security
>> > CC:
>> > [email protected],[email protected],[email protected],[email protected],[email protected],[email protected]

2019-01-28 20:21:40

by linuxgpletc

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Author of GPC-Slots2 promises to sue "John Doe" who violated GPL recission.

Author of GPC-Slots2 threatens to sue "John Doe" who violated GPL
recission.
(And who also added a "Code of Conduct", which Author of GPC-Slots2 is
opposed to on principal,
and who decided to impersonate Author aswell, registering a false
address in his nom-de-guerre)


http://8ch.net/tech/res/1018729.html#1024398


Anonymous 01/27/19 (Sun) 01:46:44 No.1023699

>> 1023661

> You can't revoke, though :^)

Yes I can, and have.

It is MY property. NOT YOURS.

I CAN TELL YOU THAT YOUR LICENSE IS REVOKED.

Infact, you, whomever you are: Your license is revoked.

You paid me nothing, there is not contract between you and I.

It is a bare license, without an attached interest.

You're license is revoked, and I will sue you if you modify, use, or
distribute the game.

Understand >>1023661

Anonymous 01/28/19 (Mon) 15:29:22 No.1024316






>> 1023699

oh no no no

https://github.com/MikeeUSA/GPC-Slots-2






>> 1024316

And now you're violating copyright law, if you're the same "John Doe"
etc.

Anonymous 01/28/19 (Mon) 19:56:29 No.1024380

And if I ever find out who you are, I will sue you.

Anonymous 01/28/19 (Mon) 19:57:45 No.1024382






>> 1024328

compiles better ;^)

Anonymous 01/28/19 (Mon) 20:02:05 No.1024384






>> 1024380

do it faggot

protip: you can't

Anonymous 01/28/19 (Mon) 20:06:36 No.1024390






>> 1024379

How am I violating copyright law? The code is licensed under the GPLv2+.
I don't think I'm violating any requirements. If I do please tell me and
I'll fix it.

Anonymous 01/28/19 (Mon) 20:07:37 No.1024391





>> 1024316

Probably same 8channer who made the fake account on linux game data
base. I guess I could try to get discovery from them...





>> 1024384

Yes I can. The code is MY property, NOT yours, and I have rescinded
permission to modify, make derivative works, and redistribute it FROM
you (assuming you are the same John Doe). I can sue you for copyright.

IF... I can find out who you are (well I could sue "John Doe" and try to
find out in discovery)

>> 1024382

You're still a moron. That is also a spot where a switch statement would
be pointless. You could count the "string length", but that would take
more computational time since PERL would have to convert it to a string,
then count, rather than just comparing an int.

Anonymous 01/28/19 (Mon) 20:09:01 No.1024395






>> 1024390

Your license was rescinded by author.

You did not author anything, so you cannot hold him to the "terms".

In the USA he can and has rescinded permission from you.

Anonymous 01/28/19 (Mon) 20:09:55 No.1024396






>> 1024390

*(You did not pay author anything, so you cannot hold him to the
"terms".)

(There is no contract between you and him)

Anonymous 01/28/19 (Mon) 20:11:37 No.1024398






>> 1024390

1) I rescind your permission to modify, make derivative works,
distribute the program. The GPL license you "have" been granted from me,
is revoked.

2) you are impersonating me.

2019-01-29 08:52:26

by linuxgpletc

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: Author of GPC-Slots2 promises to sue "John Doe" who violated GPL recission.

Some updates:

http://8ch.net/tech/res/1018729.html#1024398

Anonymous 01/29/19 (Tue) 08:32:45 No.1024591

>> 1024400

I rescind the license from you.

I am going to sue you if I find out who you are.

>> 1024400

> #This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or

> #modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License

> #as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2

> #of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

That is permission. It flows from me, NOT the file.

I am the owner of the GPC-Slots2 game code.

The previously given permission has been revoked from you.

A license, absent an interest, is revocable.

You have paid me nothing. I can and I have rescinded the license from
you and am not granting you any others.

You are now violating my copyright, should you continue to
redistribute/modify/etc.

That's how it works in the USA.

>> 1024405

Might waste more cycles than the compares.




-------




Anonymous 01/29/19 (Tue) 08:35:04 No.1024593

>> 1024586
>> 1024588
>> 1024589
I can't even imagine being this bootyblasted.
> #This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
> #modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
> #as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2
> #of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
You can't rescind this :^)


Anonymous 01/29/19 (Tue) 08:36:48 No.1024594
>> 1024591
> Might waste more cycles than the compares.
You know that gpcslots2 is written in perl, right?

>> 1024592
sue me then XDDDDDDSDDDDSDSSDDDD
Protip: you won't because you're a LARPer




-------




>> 1024593

YES I CAN.
HOW MUCH DID YOU FUCKING PAY ME?
NOTHING.

ARE WE IN A CONTRACT?
NO.

IT IS A BARE LICENSE.

I __CAN__ RESCIND IT AT ANY TIME. AND I HAVE FROM YOU YOU FUCKING PIECE
OF FUCKING SHIT.

THE CODE IS NOT YOUR PROPERTY. IT IS _MY_ PROPERTY.
I CAN DECIDE HOW __MY____ FUCKING PROPERTY IS TO BE USED.

I DID _NOT__ GIVE YOU THE PROPERTY. I ALLOWED YOU A LICENSE TO USE IT. I
HAVE NOW REVOKED THAT LICENSE FROM YOU YOU FUCKING PRO-WOMEN'S RIGHTS
ANTI-MARRY-CUTE-YOUNG-GIRLS PIECE OF FUCKING FILTH.

As such, said language you quoted is no longer operative for you.
Show me a case otherwise.
You won't because you cannot.
Gratis licenses, without an attached interest, are revocable.


> p46 "As long as the project continues to honor the terms of the
> licenses under which it recieved contributions, the licenses continue
> in effect. There is one important caveat: Even a perpetual license can
> be revoked. See the discussion of bare licenses and contracts in
> Chapter 4"
--Lawrence Rosen

> p56 "A third problem with bare licenses is that they may be revocable
> by the licensor. Specifically, /a license not coupled with an interest
> may be revoked./ The term /interest/ in this context usually means the
> payment of some royalty or license fee, but there are other more
> complicated ways to satisfy the interest requirement. For example, a
> licensee can demonstrate that he or she has paid some consideration-a
> contract law term not found in copyright or patent law-in order to
> avoid revocation. Or a licensee may claim that he or she relied on the
> software licensed under an open source license and now is dependent
> upon that software, but this contract law concept, called promissory
> estoppel, is both difficult to prove and unreliable in court tests.
> (The concepts of /consideration/ and /promissory estoppel/ are
> explained more fully in the next section.) Unless the courts allow us
> to apply these contract law principles to a license, we are faced with
> a bare license that is revocable.
--Lawrence Rosen

> p278 "Notice that in a copyright dispute over a bare license, the
> plaintiff will almost certainly be the copyright owner. If a licensee
> were foolish enough to sue to enforce the terms and conditions of the
> license, the licensor can simply revoke the bare license, thus ending
> the dispute. Remeber that a bare license in the absence of an interest
> is revocable."
--Lawrence Rosen

Lawrence Rosen - Open Source Licensing - Sofware Freedom and
Intellectual property Law



> p65 "Of all the licenses descibed in this book, only the GPL makes the
> explicity point that it wants nothing of /acceptance/ of
> /consideration/:
> ...
> The GPL authors intend that it not be treated as a contract. I will say
> much more about this license and these two provisions in Chapter 6. For
> now, I simply point out that the GPL licensors are in essentially the
> same situation as other open source licensors who cannot prove offer,
> acceptance, or consideration. There is no contract."
--Lawrence Rosen

----
> David McGowan, Professor of Law, University of Minnesota Law School:

> "Termination of rights

> [...] The most plausible assumption is that a developer who releases
> code under the GPL may terminate GPL rights, probably at will.

> [...] My point is not that termination is a great risk, it is that it
> is not recognized as a risk even though it is probably relevant to
> commercial end-users, accustomed to having contractual rights they can
> enforce themselves.





-------


Anonymous 01/29/19 (Tue) 08:45:52 No.1024599
>> 1024594
> sue me then XDDDDDDSDDDDSDSSDDDD

Kindly provide your name, address, etc. Also a photo.

> Protip: you won't because you're a LARPer
I will if you're in the USA.
If you're not then this is a meaningless discussion. This is about US
law, not some other country's law


2019-01-29 09:11:31

by linuxgpletc

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: Author of GPC-Slots2 promises to sue "John Doe" who violated GPL recission. (update)

Some updates (2):

http://8ch.net/tech/res/1018729.html#1024398


Anonymous 01/29/19 (Tue) 08:47:02 No.1024601
>> 1024597
> HOW MUCH DID YOU FUCKING PAY ME?
Nothing. Thank God for that.
> ARE WE IN A CONTRACT?
No.
> IT IS A BARE LICENSE.
Is this lawyer speak? I'm not a lawyer, sorry.
> I CAN RESCIND IT AT ANY TIME.
wrong
> THE CODE IS NOT YOUR PROPERTY. IT IS _MY_ PROPERTY.
It is your intellectual property that you have licensed to me under the
GPLv2+.
> I ALLOWED YOU A LICENSE TO USE IT.
correct
> I HAVE NOW REVOKED THAT LICENSE FROM YOU YOU [...].
no
> Show me a case otherwise.
why???????????
> Gratis licenses, without an attached interest, are revocable.
sorry m8. you are wrong




Anonymous 01/29/19 (Tue) 09:03:54 No.1024602
>> 1024601
> >ARE WE IN A CONTRACT?
> No.
Then explain to me, if we are not in a contract, how you can bind me to
a "no revocation" clause. Explain it to me, slowly, please.
> >IT IS A BARE LICENSE.
> Is this lawyer speak? I'm not a lawyer, sorry.
Ignorance of the law is no excuse.
A bare license is simply permission.
When you allow someone to enter your house you are giving them a (bare)
license to enter your house. When you tell them to leave you are
rescinding that license. You can do so at any time.
Now if they pay you for "I can enter your house for 30 days", then
because there is consideration, and a contract, you cannot then reneg on
that term.
> >I CAN RESCIND IT AT ANY TIME.
> wrong
You just agreed that we are not in a contract, how can you now declare
that I cannot rescind the license. Please explain you reasoning
> sorry m8. you are wrong
Give you legal reasoning.





2019-01-29 09:38:58

by linuxgpletc

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: Author of GPC-Slots2 promises to sue "John Doe" who violated GPL recission. (update 3)

Some updates (3):

http://8ch.net/tech/res/1018729.html



Anonymous 01/29/19 (Tue) 09:23:25 No.1024608

>> 1024606

https://copyleft.org/guide/comprehensive-gpl-guidech8.html#x11-540007.4

Sorry lad.

Anonymous 01/29/19 (Tue) 09:25:16 No.1024609

>> 1024604

> Cites previously anonomyous paralegal woman from online rag

> Ignores published lawyers who are men

(Paralegal woman stopped talking after she would outed)

Anonymous 01/29/19 (Tue) 09:27:15 No.1024610

>> 1024608

Sorry, they published that "clarification" after I raised the issue, and
their "clarification" is bullshit.

Guess what: The FSF doesn't make the law.

Quick rundown:

Section 4 of the GPLv2 states "parties who have received..."

The "you" here is the licensee, it is not the grantor (See Section 0 of
the GPLv2 "Each licensee is addressed as "you". "). It is not applicable
against the grantor of the license: it is a rule the licensee has to
abide by, set by the grantor, in-order to have permission to modify or
create derivative works at all.

About the printer driver case: The contract in that case is the
preliminary writing, the offer to do business ("pay us, or alternatively
follow the GPL"). The acceptance of that contract by following the terms
of that preliminary writing (choosing the GPL instead of paying). That
is why both contract and damages under copyright are available. Damages
for the contract portion ("pay us"), or damages for violating the GPL
license.

The parties later settled out of court. The key is that the businesses
offer created two alternative means of acceptance of it's offer to do
business: pay for the commercial license, or follow the GPL. So the
court allowed the biz to recover the lost profit.

Anonymous 01/29/19 (Tue) 09:29:15 No.1024612

>> 1024608

Sorry, read a book *, not a publication by interested parties that was
debunked 5 hours after it was published.
https://lkml.org/lkml/2018/10/26/420

*
https://www.amazon.com/Open-Source-Licensing-Software-Intellectual/dp/0131487876

Anonymous 01/29/19 (Tue) 09:34:06 No.1024614

>> 1024604

>> 1024608

Cites idiot self-sure* paralegal woman who doesn't know her ass from her
elbow, and who went silent after she was outed, plus a publication from
an interested party that was immediately debunked.

(*is there any other type?)

Vs: Cites published lawyers well versed in their field.

Explains why interested party's publication is bullshit immediately once
aware of the fraudulent advice.

Anonymous 01/29/19 (Tue) 09:36:24 No.1024615

Notice no response to >>1024602

Just a change of tactics.