Thank you for your insight.
It is a shame that there were no responses. They ignored your post, then
kept baying at me: "no this is wrong" "you're not a lawyer" "I will not
lower myself to refute you with arguments!".
As for non-monetary consideration to support an additional no-revocation
term:
Many of the old linux-kernel (programmer)rights-holders have received
nothing, and have made no such promise.
Many of the contributors (who did not transfer their rights) have
received nothing.
There is nothing to uphold the contention that they have forfeited their
default right to rescind license to their property.
They never made such a promise, they were never paid for such a promise,
they never contracted for such, etc.
They wrote code, licensed it gratuitously,
and now an attempt is being made to both control their speech, their
action, and to basically convert their property.
Most of the entities who have been licensed the works have neither paid
anything to the various rights-holders,
nor have they ever contacted nor been contacted by the various
rights-holders, etc.
Thank you for the response, though I feel you don't address my
question. Happily though, I spoke with an acquaintance and it was
determined that the subservience to the license (i.e. agreeing to be
bound by the GPL2) could not be offered as consideration as its
restrictions were not the licensee's to offer at the time of
acceptance of the license. The licensee had no rights to offer as part
of the contract, as the contract had not yet given them any rights to
give up. The terms put forth by the GPL2 are only restrictions that
are part of the license.
Furthermore, as stated above, it should seem quite self referential -
I can't offer my acceptance of a license as consideration, because it
is what I am trying to accept.
As I am sure you are aware, under US law there is no contract if both
sides have not provided consideration. This leaves us in the strange
place of gratis licenses being suggestions.
Cheers,
R0b0t1
On Fri, Dec 28, 2018 at 12:47 PM <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Thank you for your insight.
>
> It is a shame that there were no responses. They ignored your post, then
> kept baying at me: "no this is wrong" "you're not a lawyer" "I will not
> lower myself to refute you with arguments!".
>
> As for non-monetary consideration to support an additional no-revocation
> term:
> Many of the old linux-kernel (programmer)rights-holders have received
> nothing, and have made no such promise.
> Many of the contributors (who did not transfer their rights) have
> received nothing.
>
> There is nothing to uphold the contention that they have forfeited their
> default right to rescind license to their property.
> They never made such a promise, they were never paid for such a promise,
> they never contracted for such, etc.
>
> They wrote code, licensed it gratuitously,
> and now an attempt is being made to both control their speech, their
> action, and to basically convert their property.
>
> Most of the entities who have been licensed the works have neither paid
> anything to the various rights-holders,
> nor have they ever contacted nor been contacted by the various
> rights-holders, etc.
>
It's good that you got an opinion from an additional party.
The programmers swear they know better than I on this subject.
In a previous debate on the subject, the programmers decided that the
fact that they followed the license was "consideration", even though
without the permission from the grantor they have no right to
modify or redistribute the grantor's program to begin with.
I had to attempt to dispell that notion, informing them that the
permission to redistribute is a gratuity from the grantor,
the permission to modify the work is a gratuity from the grantor,
the permission to make derivative works is a gratuity from the grantor,
and the permission to redistribute derivative works is a gratuity from
the grantor;
that they have no permission to do these things without the grantor,
They still believe it however and ignore me:
Their take is that if you lent (licensed) them a lawnmower and told them
not to wreck it,
the fact that they did not wreck it entitles them to keep the lawnmower
forever
(they followed your instruction regarding the use of your property:
"thus consideration,
thus irrevocable license")
Previous writing:
--------------------------------
The permission to redistribute was simply given, gratis, by the grantor.
He asked for nothing in return, and, infact received nothing, not even a
promise of compliance.
At a later date any of countless licensees might decide they wish make
derivative works based upon the copyright-owner's property.
By law this is barred.
However the copyright holder here has magnanimously granted that the
licensee is, contrary to the default rule, permitted to create and
publish derivative works provided that they use the same license as the
original work.
Here the copyright holder suffers a detriment. He is payed nothing for
this forbearance (no consideration).
The licensee does not suffer a detriment: he had no right to make nor
publish a derivative work to begin with.
The extending to him, of permission, is a pure gratuity.
He payed nothing for the change from "You may not create nor distribute
derivative works" to "You may create and distribute derivative works
under the same license as the original work".
--------------------------------
Context:
--------------------------------
https://news.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=12682608&cid=57401302
Re: Straw Man (Score:0)
by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 30, 2018 @10:51PM
(#57401302)
GPL is a bare license.
Don't agree?
What consideration was given?
Can't answer that? Don't know why it would matter?
Why do you think it is a contract then?
--------------------------------
https://news.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=12682608&cid=57403506
Re: Straw Man (Score:2)
by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <[email protected]> on Monday October
01, 2018 @09:21AM (#57403506) Homepage Journal
>What consideration was given?
The right to redistribute was given in exchange for use of the license
for one's own code. Something for something. What was your question
again?
--------------------------------
https://news.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=12682608&cid=57408874
Re: Straw Man (Score:0)
by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday October 02, 2018 @12:58AM (#57408874)
Incorrect.
The permission to redistribute was simply given, gratis, by the grantor.
He asked for nothing in return, and, infact received nothing, not even a
promise of compliance.
At a later date any of countless licensees might decide they wish make
derivative works based upon the copyright-owner's property.
By law this is barred.
However the copyright holder here has magnanimously granted that the
licensee is, contrary to the default rule, permitted to create and
publish derivative works provided that they use the same license as the
original work.
Here the copyright holder suffers a detriment. He is payed nothing for
this forbearance (no consideration).
The licensee does not suffer a detriment: he had no right to make nor
publish a derivative work to begin with.
The extending to him, of permission, is a pure gratuity.
He payed nothing for the change from "You may not create nor distribute
derivative works" to "You may create and distribute derivative works
under the same license as the original work".
On 2018-12-28 21:49, R0b0t1 wrote:
> Thank you for the response, though I feel you don't address my
> question. Happily though, I spoke with an acquaintance and it was
> determined that the subservience to the license (i.e. agreeing to be
> bound by the GPL2) could not be offered as consideration as its
> restrictions were not the licensee's to offer at the time of
> acceptance of the license. The licensee had no rights to offer as part
> of the contract, as the contract had not yet given them any rights to
> give up. The terms put forth by the GPL2 are only restrictions that
> are part of the license.
>
> Furthermore, as stated above, it should seem quite self referential -
> I can't offer my acceptance of a license as consideration, because it
> is what I am trying to accept.
>
> As I am sure you are aware, under US law there is no contract if both
> sides have not provided consideration. This leaves us in the strange
> place of gratis licenses being suggestions.
>
> Cheers,
> R0b0t1
>
> On Fri, Dec 28, 2018 at 12:47 PM <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> Thank you for your insight.
>>
>> It is a shame that there were no responses. They ignored your post,
>> then
>> kept baying at me: "no this is wrong" "you're not a lawyer" "I will
>> not
>> lower myself to refute you with arguments!".
>>
>> As for non-monetary consideration to support an additional
>> no-revocation
>> term:
>> Many of the old linux-kernel (programmer)rights-holders have received
>> nothing, and have made no such promise.
>> Many of the contributors (who did not transfer their rights) have
>> received nothing.
>>
>> There is nothing to uphold the contention that they have forfeited
>> their
>> default right to rescind license to their property.
>> They never made such a promise, they were never paid for such a
>> promise,
>> they never contracted for such, etc.
>>
>> They wrote code, licensed it gratuitously,
>> and now an attempt is being made to both control their speech, their
>> action, and to basically convert their property.
>>
>> Most of the entities who have been licensed the works have neither
>> paid
>> anything to the various rights-holders,
>> nor have they ever contacted nor been contacted by the various
>> rights-holders, etc.
>>