GNU says "Please help spread the awareness that free commercial software is possible. You can do this by making an effort not to say “commercial” when you mean “proprietary.”"
http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/categories.html said:Commercial software
“Commercial” and “proprietary” are not the same! Commercial software is software developed by a business as part of its business. Most commercial software is proprietary, but there is commercial free software, and there is noncommercial nonfree software.
For example, GNU Ada is developed by a company. It is always distributed under the terms of the GNU GPL, and every copy is free software; but its developers sell support contracts. When their salesmen speak to prospective customers, sometimes the customers say, “We would feel safer with a commercial compiler.” The salesmen reply, “GNU Ada is a commercial compiler; it happens to be free software.”
For the GNU Project, the priorities are in the other order: the important thing is that GNU Ada is free software; that it is commercial is just a detail. However, the additional development of GNU Ada that results from its being commercial is definitely beneficial.
Please help spread the awareness that free commercial software is possible. You can do this by making an effort not to say “commercial” when you mean “proprietary.”
http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html said:“Free software” does not mean “noncommercial”. A free program must be available for commercial use, commercial development, and commercial distribution. Commercial development of free software is no longer unusual; such free commercial software is very important. You may have paid money to get copies of free software, or you may have obtained copies at no charge. But regardless of how you got your copies, you always have the freedom to copy and change the software, even to sell copies.
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Open Source?
Another group has started using the term “open source” to mean something close (but not identical) to “free software”. We prefer the term “free software” because, once you have heard that it refers to freedom rather than price, it calls to mind freedom. The word “open” never refers to freedom.
- 1. Why is Star-Made not "Free software" too?
- 2. What are the barriers which avoid it being free?
- 3. Does there need to be a GPL-deriviat with a
- "You are allowed to distribute it along a few GUI-themes with more restrictive rights"-paragraph
- to make it possible?
- 4. Does there need to be a GPL-deriviat with a
- "You are allowed to distribute it after [enter date < x years]"-paragraph"
- to make it possible?
(0) The freedom to run the program as you wish, for whatever purpose.
(1) The freedom to study the program's “source code”, and change it, so the program does your computing as you wish.
(2) The freedom to make and distribute exact copies when you wish.
(3) The freedom to make and distribute copies of your modified versions, when you wish.