Greg KH wrote:
Let's keep it simple please, and not add new licenses for no real good reason if at all possible.
I've stated a number of real good reasons to keep copyleft-next as a dual-licensing option; they seem to have not been refuted here. Indeed, this point is quite salient:
Joe Perches wrote:
You can ask but it's the submitter's choice to license their code however they desire.
… to which I'd add, as long as the license is GPLv2-only-compatible, which of course (GPLv2-only|copyleft-next) is.
Rest is admittedly a bit OT:
Greg also noted:
I have stated in public many times to companies that try to add dual-licensed new kernel code that they should only do so if they provide a really good reason
We can agree to disagree on the differences in how company vs. individual requests and their "good reasons" are handled/prioritized; I think we'd both agree it's actually moot anyway. While it's an important topic, I apologize for raising that as it was off-topic to the issue at hand.
On that off-topic point, Tim Bird added:
It's not at all purely symbolic to dual license (GPLv2-only|2-Clause-BSD). That dual-licensing has allowed the interchange of a lot of code between the BSD Unixes and Linux, that otherwise would not have happened.
This is a good point, but the same argument is of course valid for copyleft-next-licensed projects. While there are currently fewer than those than BSD-ish projects, I don't think Linux should stand on ceremony of “your project must be this tall to ride this ride” and share code with us … and then there are the aspirational arguments that I made in my prior email. -- Bradley M. Kuhn - he/him
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