License Violations and ComplianceBB+ wrote:I really hope the FSF follows this one through, just so we all get to see you blame yet another organization (and everyone else) for Vas' misconduct...The FSF essentially exists to follow cases like this through (along with its legal arm, the SFLC), and has already decided to pursue it. I think (haven't heard in awhile, and France treats August as a month for vacation) they are currently chasing down contact details for all known R1-R232a distributors as the initial course of action, and will send them [in an official manner] their standard form letter, asking them to comply with the GPL restrictions regarding source code availability, blah-blah-blah.
Assembling the case for monetary damages will then occur later. I'm not in the loop, but my impression is that it is essentially "certain" that the case will be seen through (one way or the other), according to Fabien's wishes. The evidence is more than sufficient, as is the magnitude of any benefits derived from Fruit-infringement. If the FSF didn't go through with this, one might wonder what the use of transferring copyright to them could possibly be.
As such, my opinion is that there is principally one endpoint at this juncture: a drawn-out court case [maybe in multiple jurisdictions, but as I say, the FSF/SFLC have little better to do -- this case is probably even a "big fish" to them!]. And as Don Dailey put it (amidst a barrage of other comments), the inevitable verdict of "guilty" for copyright infringement seems clear. The only question is the percentage award. Combined with the quirks of Polish copyright law (triple damages, and a 2x contribution to a "Ministry Fund for Creativity" -- see pages 1049-50 here, or Sections 79,1-2 of the Polish Copyright Act), I don't think that a maximal liability for Rajlich of 7 figures (in euros) is any exaggeration, though it depends on the exact percentages awarded, not to mention the actual extent of Rybka profitability.
OTOH, the FSF itself mostly cares about its "free software" philosophy, and only pursues damages on the behalf of those who transfer them copyright, at least until lawyers get involved [when they also ask for compensation therein]
by Brett Smith — last modified September 29, 2010 11:37
The FSF Compliance Lab helps enforce the licenses for all free software.
Compliance Philosophy
We receive reports about free software license violations from the public every month, and we investigate them all. Since the FSF holds the copyrights for a number of popular programs, such as GNU bash and wget, we can usually take immediate action against the violator — and either way, we work with other interested copyright holders to help ensure everyone's licenses are protected.
Many copyright holders seek monetary damages when their license is violated. We do not — we only want violators to come back into compliance, and help repair any harm done to the free software community by their past actions. Because of that, we contact violators directly, and negotiate a strategy with them that best accomplishes those goals. Oftentimes the violation is unintentional, and people are happy to have help getting their work straightened out. When a violator is less cooperative, we call on the resources of the Software Freedom Law Center to help come to an agreement.
So, the FSF *might* be persuaded to ask for publication of source in order to bring the licence back into compliance. But apparently the source no longer exists. Since FSF do not seek monetary damages, there is no source, what are you asking them to go to court in Poland for exactly? Lawyer fees, translation fees, interpreter fees - someone is going to front pay all those for what reward exactly?