diff --git a/gpl-lgpl.tex b/gpl-lgpl.tex index 7ec4917c8f5cd1d1827865e2238717385ebd689b..4199aa8dd81d89bc023b2372912f4e33be1c5228 100644 --- a/gpl-lgpl.tex +++ b/gpl-lgpl.tex @@ -138,7 +138,7 @@ Study of the GNU General Public License (herein, abbreviated as \defn{GNU GPL} or just \defn{GPL}) must begin by first considering the broader world of software freedom. The GPL was not created in a vacuum. Rather, it was created to embody and defend a set of principles that were set forth at the -founding of the GNU project and the Free Software Foundation (FSF) -- the +founding of the GNU Project and the Free Software Foundation (FSF) -- the preeminent organization that upholds, defends and promotes the philosophy of software freedom. A prerequisite for understanding both of the popular versions of the GPL @@ -831,9 +831,9 @@ The GNU's Not Unix (``GNU'') project, which Richard M.~Stallman (``RMS'') founded in 1984 to make a complete Unix-compatible operating system implementation that assured software freedom for all. However, RMS saw that using a license that gave but did not assure software freedom would be -counter to the goals of the GNU project. RMS invented ``copyleft'' as an +counter to the goals of the GNU Project. RMS invented ``copyleft'' as an answer to that problem, and began using various copyleft licenses for the -early GNU project programs.\footnote{RMS writes more fully about this topic in +early GNU Project programs.\footnote{RMS writes more fully about this topic in his essay entitled simply \href{http://www.gnu.org/gnu/thegnuproject.html}{\textit{The GNU Project}}. For those who want to hear the story in his own voice,