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  #1  
Alt 03.09.2005, 18:28
Benutzerbild von Jan Stöver
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GPL 3 Anfang 2007


Nachdem bereits Link im gleichen Fenster öffnen Anfang diesen Jahres bekannt wurde, dass die überarbeitet wird, gibt es nun neue Fakten.

Im ersten Quartal 2006 soll ein Entwurf fertig sein und öffentlich zur Diskussion gestellt werden, der insbesondere das internationale Urheberrecht stärker als bisher berücksichtigt. Anfang 2007 soll dann die fertige Fassung der GPL 3 veröffentlicht werden.

http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html
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Jan Stöver
  #2  
Alt 04.09.2005, 12:52
Benutzerbild von Frederic Schneider
WoltLab Holzmichl
 
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Kann mir mal einer sagen, weshalb so etwas immer solange brauch? Sitzen da dreißig Rechtsanwälte dran, die sich nicht einigen können - oder was ist los?

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Frederic Schneider
WoltLab Team / WoltLab Wiki / GamePorts / Frederic Schneider / neuer-patriotismus.de
  #3  
Alt 04.09.2005, 13:17
Benutzerbild von Daniel Richter
TVBlogger
 
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Und was soll dann da geändert werden?
Ich war eigentlich immer der Meinung, dass die GPL - so wie sie ist - hervorragend funktioniert ... ?

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Daniel Richter
Immer ein Besuch wert: TVBlogger.de - Aktuelle Nachrichten aus der Welt des Fernsehens
  #4  
Alt 04.09.2005, 18:03
Benutzerbild von Jan Stöver
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Zitat:
Zitat von Daniel Richter
Und was soll dann da geändert werden?
Grundlegend geändert wird die GPL sicherlich nicht. Es geht vielmehr um Anpassungen an Ereignisse und Neuigkeiten der Letzten Jahre. Man darf nicht vergessen, dass die aktuell vorliegende GPL aus dem Jahre 1991 ist.

Zitat:
Zitat von ProLinux
Moglen arbeitet zusammen mit anderen Mitgliedern der Free Software Foundation (FSF) am Entwurf der neuen GPL-Version. Auf der in San Francisco stattfindenden LinuxWorld wird er einen Vortrag mit weiteren Details über die Neufassung halten. »Wir müssen die GPL globalisieren«, sagte Moglen. Sie sei zwar auch außerhalb der USA erfolgreich, müsse jedoch rechtlich kosmopolitischer werden. Durch die Änderung soll die Lizenz auch für Anwälte weltweit zugänglicher werden. Die derzeitige Fassung der GPL bezieht sich stark auf das amerikanische Urheberrecht, obwohl bei der Erstellung die »Berner Übereinkunft zum Schutze von Werken der Literatur und Kunst« berücksichtig wurde.
Doch die GPL muss laut Moglen nicht nur an das internationale Copyright angepasst werden. Zum Teil müsse auch die Sprache überarbeitet werden, da ein paar englischsprachige Anwälte Probleme damit hatten. Nicht zuletzt müsse die Lizenz an aktuelle Technologien, wie Web-Services, angepasst werden. Die GPL müsse festlegen, was geschieht, wenn nicht Software selbst, sondern ein darauf basierender Service verteilt wird.
Quelle: http://www.pro-linux.de/news/2005/8481.html
Zitat:
Zitat von heise
Laut dem Präsidenten der Free Software Foundation (FSF) und Verfasser der Lizenz, Richard Stallman, soll die neue Version eine bessere Abdeckung von Patenten, von Software in Netzwerken und auf restriktiver Hardware sowie eine bessere Integration von GPL- mit Nicht-GPL-Software erlauben.
Quelle: http://www.heise.de/newsticker/meldung/62658
Weitere Informationen zu den geplanten, bzw. besser ausgedrückt notwendigen Änderungen, stehen auch im ersten Beitrag hier auf der Boardunity: Link im gleichen Fenster öffnen GPL Lizenz wird überarbeitet

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Jan Stöver
  #5  
Alt 06.09.2005, 18:32
Benutzerbild von Jan Stöver
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Streit um die Behandlung geistiger Eigentumsrechte in der GPLv3


Zitat:
Zitat von heise
Noch stehen die Grundzüge der geplanten Version 3 der GNU General Public License (GPL) nicht fest, da hat das Projekt schon einen handfesten Streit um die Behandlung geistiger Eigentumsrechte ausgelöst. Anlass sind Äußerungen von Georg Greve, Präsident der Free Software Foundation Europe (FSFE), wonach die GPLv3 eine Klausel zur Ächtung von Softwarepatenten und Digital Rights Management (DRM) enthalten soll. Der Entwurf solle einen Vorschlag enthalten, dass die GPL nicht kompatibel mit DRM sei, betonte Greve in einer Agenturmeldung. Entsprechende Kopierschutztechniken bezeichnete er als "Sackgasse für die Gesellschaft". Schon zuvor hatte Greve darauf hingewiesen, dass er im Gegensatz zu Firmen wie Sun oder Linux-Vater Linus Torvalds eine friedliche Koexistenz zwischen freier Software und DRM nicht für möglich hält.
... mehr bei heise
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Jan Stöver
  #6  
Alt 15.10.2005, 19:09
Benutzerbild von Jan Stöver
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Die Free Software Foundation kündigte bereits im September diesen Jahres das GPL 3 Developement and Publicitiy Project an.

Anfang nächsten Jahres soll ja der erste Entwurf der GPL 3 stehen und dort dann öffentlich diskutiert werden. Ein knappes Jahr lang sollen Entwickler und Nutzer dann die Möglichkeit haben den Entwurf zu besprechen, bevor er Anfang 2007 offiziell veröffentlicht werden soll.

http://www.fsf.org/news/gplv3

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Jan Stöver
  #7  
Alt 11.01.2006, 14:21
Linuxfanatiker
 
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Erste Conferenz


Zitat:
Free Software Foundation First 2006-01-17
International Conference on GPLv3 2006-01-16
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
FSF Europe, represented by Georg C. F. Greve, Ciaran O'Riordan, and Stefano Maffulli, will participate in the presentation of a first discussion draft on version 3 of the GNU General Public License at the Free Software Foundation First International Conference on GPLv3, being held at the MIT in Cambridge, USA.
Ps:
ich finde das mann an der GPL nicht mehr viel verändern muss!
  #8  
Alt 18.01.2006, 19:46
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Der erste entwurf

Zitat:
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Discussion Draft 1 of Version 3, 16 Jan 2006

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Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail.

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This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it
under certain conditions; type `show c' for details.

The hypothetical commands `show w' and `show c' should show the appropriate
parts of the General Public License. Of course, the commands you use may
be called something other than `show w' and `show c'; for a GUI interface,
you would use an "About box" instead.

You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or your
school, if any, to sign a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if
necessary. Here is a sample; alter the names:

Yoyodyne, Inc., hereby disclaims all copyright interest in the program
`Gnomovision' (which makes passes at compilers) written by James Hacker.

<signature of Rich R. Thanus>, 1 April 1989
Rich R. Thanus, Peripheral Visionary

For more information on how to apply and follow the GNU GPL, see
http://www.gnu.org/licenses.

The GNU General Public License does not permit incorporating your program
into proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you
may consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with
the library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General
Public License instead of this License.

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