Linus quotes "Say I'm a hardware manufacturer. I decide I love some particular piece of open-source software, but when I sell my hardware, I want to make sure it runs only one particular version of that software, because that's what I've validated. So I make my hardware check the cryptographic signature of the binary before I run it ... The GPLv3 doesn't seem to allow that, and in fact, most of the GPLv3 changes seem to be explicitly designed exactly to not allow the above kind of use, which I don't think it has any business doing."
This is surely not convincing. Here it seems Linus himself wants to play the role of a supergod, by restricting access. In Free Software paradigm, the point is to leave the whole control of the project threadbare to the community. The 'shark-laser' syndrome is what the proprietary developers and (rogue) governments put forward when they want to be hide away from being transparent. Is this the burning issue or are there more to it ?
CK Raju
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