Ricardo:
> Possibly, possibly not. I made no mention of *my* ideals, it wasn't the
> point I was making. The point I was making is that the majority of people
> *prefer* the capitalistic way. I think GPL is too radical to be practical
> (regardless of whether I believe it's the the right way or not), since
> there are a lot of fat cats to persuade...
Capitalism is a system based on general private ownership of capital, not
the modern phenomenon of consolidation of that capital in the hands of a few
people. Indeed, that is usually called an oligopoly and is not the normal
outcome of a fair market, so presence of such a situation is normally
regarded as just cause for intervention.
GPL probably is too radical: it's far more capitalistic than our system.
> Basically, I was making a point of practicality for the BSD licence,
> rather than an idealistic or personal one.
As was I. The BSD licence allows anyone to attempt to pervert the market by
fencing off their patch of the commons. As the commons in this situation is
infinite, normal fencing is inadequate. Each market being fenced off is
infinite and that isn't permitted by a capitalist system. That's why
copyrights and patents expire eventually: if they do not, they cannot exist
in a capitalist system.
--
MJR