>> 1016160
> Everybody else in the SFConverancy and the LKML disagree, a software
> distribution license is non-revocable.
Yes, and they are wrong.
All the programmers in the LKML are indeed wrong in what they believe.
The non-lawyer* at the SFConverancy is indeed wrong in what he believes
(They even had to hire outside counsel to draft their response, which
was full of weasel-words and non-statements)
*https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bradley_Kuhn#Academia_and_early_career
The fact of the matter is, there is no rule "A software license is
irrevocable".
The rule is, when stated simply: you get what you have paid for.
If you contracted for a specific rule regarding revocation, and you
payed the grantor for that rule: that rule will apply between you and
him regarding the piece of property (unless it's against public policy
etc).
If you did not pay for such, you cannot rely on such a "promise".
That is why you THINK there is a "software licenses are irrevocable"
rule: because the cases on this issue involve commercial 1990s software.
In those cases the judges ruled that the company could not willy-nilly
revoke licenses because the customer had payed them for it: specifically
for the terms in the license: so since they were paid for the court held
the company to it's end of the bargain.
Here there was no bargain: The linux coders simply have allowed you to
use their property without you giving them anything what-so-ever.
That is the crux of the issue.
That is why the FSF and others require copyright assignment for any and
all contributions of code that they will accept into their own code
base.
If they did not the actual copyright owner, having been paid no
consideration for the license terms, can recall the property at any time
(rescind the permission: the license).
That is absolutely the case with Linux.
That is why the GPLv3 was drafted, that is why they are trying to have
the kernel programmers electronically assent to all these extra pledges
now.
They want there to be some interest they can point to as reliance. Right
now there is NONE.
And even then, even then, even if the programmers put out a piece of
code and said "I will not revoke this license".
(Which they did not do in the GPLv2).
How is it secured by you, Entity X? How is that promise something you
can reasonably rely upon? What have you given to Property Owner for that
promise? And did you come to a meeting of the minds regarding such?
Nothing and no.
You have no case whatsoever. You cannot bind the hand of the property
owner regarding his own property without giving him something that he
has asked you for: and you can't simply "give" him back his own property
as "consideration" either (since you have no prior-rights to it).