@@ -2527,32 +2527,32 @@ ensure that users will remain in control over their own machines. We
recognize an exception where use of the program normally implies that the
user already has the codes. For example, in secure systems a computer owner
might possess any keys needed to run a program, while the distributor of the
program might not have the keys.
% FIXME: installation information
%FIXME: publicly documented format
\section{Understanding License Compatibility}
\label{license-compatibility}
% FIXME: reword intro to license compatibility
Another challenge facing the free software community is the proliferation of
incompatible free software licenses. Of course, we cannot make the GPL
compatible with all such licenses. GPLv3 contains provisions that are
designed to reduce license incompatibility by making it easier for developers
to combine code carrying non-GPL terms with GPL'd code.
% FIXME: more about license compatibility here.
A challenge that faced the Free Software community heavily through out the
early 2000s was the proliferation of incompatible Free Software licenses. Of
course, we cannot make the GPL compatible with all such licenses. GPLv3
contains provisions that are designed to reduce license incompatibility by
making it easier for developers to combine code carrying non-GPL terms with
GPL'd code.
\section{GPLv3~\S7: Explicit Compatibility}
% FIXME: probably mostly still right, needs some updates, though.
In GPLv3 we take a new approach to the issue of combining GPL'd code with
code governed by the terms of other free software licenses. Our view, though
it was not explicitly stated in GPLv2 itself, was that GPLv2 allowed such
combinations only if the non-GPL licensing terms permitted distribution under
the GPL and imposed no restrictions on the code that were not also imposed by
the GPL. In practice, we supplemented this policy with a structure of
exceptions for certain kinds of combinations.