Open Indiana wrote: > It's like sneezing in a dark-room, now Oracle can wait outside to see who > all catched the flue. > > ;-) Maybe it is truly CDDL for the parts marked like that, besides, why would Oracle keep CDDL headers if it is not CDDL anymore?
Also CDDL is saying derived work holds the same license as previous CDDL work. That goes for Oracle Solaris 11. If Internally in Oracle, source is developed with CDDL headers and developing on top of already open and existing CDDL licensed code, then does it matter WHO released the code? Solaris11 It is derived work from Opensolaris, it is same-licensed, it is CDDL. And maybe Oracle just does not want to acknowledge publicly that Solaris 11 is open product, like it was Opensolaris. Or it was planned at some later time to be publicized. *Best option is to develop Illumos separately but with S11 CDDL-ed code released it leaves Oracle the ability to import Illumos changes they like, because their S11 code is published. Anyway, one Oracle statement about S11 source that is marked with CDDL and released, might prove beneficial to Oracle and anyone else. Maybe Oracle did not want to make CDDL-derived work available, using its power of owning rights to Opensolaris code itself, but once CDDL-ed derived work is published, it stays as it is and it seems to me there is no coming back for Oracle, but to play with the crowd and acknowledge S11 is open source, under CDDL and use it to boost Solaris11 support and hardware sales. CDDL enforces its license on derived work on similar way Mozilla license and GPL licenses do. Maybe releasing the S11 code is best thing for Oracle, anyway. _______________________________________________ OpenIndiana-discuss mailing list [email protected] http://openindiana.org/mailman/listinfo/openindiana-discuss
