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Bradley Kuhn (bkuhn) - 10 years ago 2014-03-15 21:44:06
bkuhn@ebb.org
Rework introduction to this section.
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gpl-lgpl.tex
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@@ -523,9 +523,25 @@ such as the right of an authors to require proper attribution for their work.
 

	
 
\section{A Community of Equality}
 

	
 
The GPL uses copyright law to defend freedom and equally ensure users'
 
rights. This ultimately creates an community of equality for both
 
business and noncommercial users.
 
The previous section described the principles of software freedom, a brief
 
introduction to mechanisms that typically block these freedoms, and the
 
simplest ways that copyright holders might grant those freedoms to their
 
users for their copyrighted works of software.  The previous section also
 
introduced the idea of \textit{copyleft}: a licensing mechanism to use
 
copyright to not only grant software freedom to users, but also to uphold
 
those rights against those who might seek to curtail them.
 

	
 
Copyleft, as defined in \S~\ref{copyleft-definition}, is a general term this
 
mechanism.  The remainder of this text will discuss details of various
 
real-world implementations of copyleft -- most notably, the GPL\@.
 

	
 
This discussion begins first with some general explanation of what the GPL is
 
able to do in software development communities.  After that brief discussion
 
in this section, deeper discussion of how GPL accomplishes this in practice
 
follows in the next chapter.
 

	
 
Simply put, though, the GPL ultimately creates an community of equality for
 
both business and noncommercial users.
 

	
 
\subsection{The Noncommercial Community}
 

	
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