1995-12-04 - Apachessl (was your mail)

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From: “Jeff Hupp” <jhupp@novellnet.gensys.com>
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: 219a485f03db2030db8b38cdd47eb9718ec8ea0a79e2c9023dfa16c5bdac8cb2
Message ID: <2B69E5170C1@Novellnet.Gensys.com>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1995-12-04 03:03:43 UTC
Raw Date: Sun, 3 Dec 95 19:03:43 PST

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From: "Jeff Hupp" <jhupp@novellnet.gensys.com>
Date: Sun, 3 Dec 95 19:03:43 PST
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Apachessl (was your mail)
Message-ID: <2B69E5170C1@Novellnet.Gensys.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


On  3 Dec 95 at 11:41, Laszlo Vecsey wrote:

: > > Competing with Netscape is obviously something that's easier said than
: > > done.  But we ought to consider the strategic importance of having robust,
: > 
: > 	I hate to repeat myself, but sometimes people don't listen.
: > http://www.c2.org/apachessl/
: 
: I don't see how you can charge for a commercial versions of ApacheSSL. 
: Isn't it protected by the GNU license agreement? Or is the idea that by 
: registering ApacheSSL you still get the software for free but you are 
: required to pay for support.

	Go read the GNU license.  Nothing prevents selling the programs, 
nothing prevents selling modifications of the programs.  The major 
restraint is that you have to provide source.  Now, from what I read of 
the page, that is being done.

	Personally, I would prefer to see the whole thing given away, and if I
had done it, it would be.  But he (or his contractors / employees ) did
the work that went into modifying it, and if he want's to sell that
work he bloody well can.
-- 
JHupp@gensys.com           |For PGP Public Key:
http://gensys.com          |finger jhupp@gensys.com
Does history recorde any case in which the majority was right?






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