I admit I know nothing about what programs RedHat has contributed to, or what their plans are. I am only familiar with the GPL in general (I use arch, btw). So I tried to have Bing introduce me to the situation. The conversation got weird and maybe manipulative by Bing.

Can you explain to me why Bing is right and I am wrong?

It sounds like a brazen GPL violation. And if RedHat is allowed to deny a core feature of the GPL, the ability to redistribute, it will completely destroy the ability of any author to specify any license other than MIT. Perhaps Microsoft has that goal and forced Bing to support it.

  • @nous
    link
    English
    2
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    There are a lot of factors at play here. And I think a lot of people don’t understand them all (I know I don’t). Not all software is under GPL, so to say RHEL is under the GPL is wrong. Parts of it are, but not all of it. But let’s take a GPL package, like the kernel. The kernel itself is GPL, but that doesn’t mean the packaging code is, ie the source rpm that was written by Redhat (not the build tools and makefiles distributed with the kernel). But everyone seems to be conflating the two parts of the package as a single thing with a single license.

    I don’t know what if any license the packaging code is, for any distros. It is not normally something people think about. But as far as I understand the GPL I do not think it automatically includes the code used to package applications written in it.

    So it is not as simple as most people think it is. Redhat likely do have a claim to be able to restrict others from distributing their packages, just not the application code inside the packages.

    Though doing so is a massive dick move on their part.