nettime's avid reader on Tue, 28 Jul 2009 20:26:21 +0200 (CEST)


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<nettime> Richard Stallman: How the Swedish Pirate Party Platform Backfires on Free Software




http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/pirate-party.html

The bullying of the copyright industry in Sweden inspired the launch of the 
first political party whose platform is to reduce copyright restrictions: 
the Pirate Party. Its platform includes the prohibition of Digital 
Restrictions Management, legalization of noncommercial sharing of published 
works, and shortening of copyright for commercial use to a five-year 
period. Five years after publication, any published work would go into the 
public domain.

I support these changes, in general; but the specific combination chosen by 
the Swedish Pirate Party backfires ironically in the special case of free 
software. I'm sure that they did not intend to hurt free software, but 
that's what would happen.

The GNU General Public License and other copyleft licenses use copyright 
law to defend freedom for every user. The GPL permits everyone to publish 
modified works, but only under the same license. Redistribution of the 
unmodified work must also preserve the license. And all redistributors must 
give users access to the software's source code.

How would the Swedish Pirate Party's platform affect copylefted free 
software? After five years, its source code would go into the public 
domain, and proprietary software developers would be able to include it in 
their programs. But what about the reverse case?

Proprietary software is restricted by EULAs, not just by copyright, and the 
users don't have the source code. Even if copyright permits noncommercial 
sharing, the EULA may forbid it. In addition, the users, not having the 
source code, do not control what the program does when they run it. To run 
such a program is to surrender your freedom and give the developer control 
over you.

So what would be the effect of terminating this program's copyright after 5 
years? This would not require the developer to release source code, and 
presumably most will never do so. Users, still denied the source code, 
would still be unable to use the program in freedom. The program could even 
have a âtime bombâ in it to make it stop working after 5 years, in which 
case the âpublic domainâ copies would not run at all.

Thus, the Pirate Party's proposal would give proprietary software 
developers the use of GPL-covered source code after 5 years, but it would 
not give free software developers the use of proprietary source code, not 
after 5 years or even 50 years. The Free World would get the bad, but not 
the good. The difference between source code and object code and the 
practice of using EULAs would give proprietary software an effective 
exception from the general rule of 5-year copyright â one that free 
software does not share.

We also use copyright to partially deflect the danger of software patents. 
We cannot make our programs safe from them â no program is ever safe from 
software patents in a country which allows them â but at least we prevent 
them from being used to make the program effectively non-free. The Swedish 
Pirate Party proposes to abolish software patents, and if that is done, 
this issue would go away. But until that is achieved, we must not lose our 
only defense for protection from patents.

Once the Swedish Pirate Party had announced its platform, free software 
developers noticed this effect and began proposing a special rule for free 
software: to make copyright last longer for free software, so that it can 
continue to be copylefted. This explicit exception for free software would 
counterbalance the effective exception for proprietary software. Even ten 
years ought to be enough, I think. However, the proposal met with 
resistance from the Pirate Party's leaders, who objected to the idea of a 
longer copyright for a special case.

I could support a law that would make GPL-covered software's source code 
available in the public domain after 5 years, provided it has the same 
effect on proprietary software's source code. After all, copyleft is a 
means to an end (users' freedom), not an end in itself. And I'd rather not 
be an advocate for a stronger copyright.

So I proposed that the Pirate Party platform require proprietary software's 
source code to be put in escrow when the binaries are released. The 
escrowed source code would then be released in the public domain after 5 
years. Rather than making free software an official exception to the 5-year 
copyright rule, this would eliminate proprietary software's unofficial 
exception. Either way, the result is fair.

A Pirate Party supporter proposed a more general variant of the first 
suggestion: a general scheme to make copyright last longer as the public is 
granted more freedoms in using the work. The advantage of this is that free 
software becomes part of a general pattern of varying copyright term, 
rather than a lone exception.

I'd prefer the escrow solution, but any of these methods would avoid a 
prejudicial effect specifically against free software. There may be other 
solutions that would also do the job. One way or another, the Pirate Party 
of Sweden should avoid placing a handicap on a movement to defend the 
public from marauding giants.

Updated: $Date: 2009/07/26 09:42:52 $ 







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