diff --git a/gpl-lgpl.tex b/gpl-lgpl.tex index ec0d8ffd75691073ddefb4b9ece7c4ae5d1da583..299f7f51f1cb080fec5a574466e3d34e6afbf225 100644 --- a/gpl-lgpl.tex +++ b/gpl-lgpl.tex @@ -1149,7 +1149,7 @@ As described in the \hyperref[copyleft-definition]{earlier general discussion software freedom via the copyright system. This principle often causes theoretical or speculative dispute among lawyers, because ``the work'' --- the primary unit of consideration under most copyright rules -- is not a unit -of computer programming. In order to determine whether a ``routine'' an +of computer programming. In order to determine whether a ``routine'', an ``object'', a ``function'', a ``library'' or any other unit of software is part of one ``work'' when combined with other GPL'd code, we must ask a question that copyright law will not directly answer in the same technical @@ -1158,9 +1158,9 @@ terms. Therefore, this chapter digresses from discussion of GPL's exact text to consider the matter of combined and/or derivative works --- a concept that we must understand fully before considering GPLv2~\S\S2--3\@. At least under USA -copyright law, The GPL, and Free +copyright law, the GPL, and Free Software licensing in general, relies critically on the concept of -``derivative work'' since software that is ``independent,'' (i.e., not +``derivative work'' since software that is ``independent'', (i.e., not ``derivative'') of Free Software need not abide by the terms of the applicable Free Software license. As much is required by \S~106 of the Copyright Act, 17 U.S.C. \S~106 (2002), and admitted by Free Software