@Mi5ter_t : I don't think they are being sued for not giving the source for their own software.
You can use open source functions without going open source yourself, but concealment/deception
are licence breaches. Fat Fritz was sold with false claims.
There are issues here I don't fully understand, it sounds as though some SF devs are trying to exclude
CB as distributors because they previously broke licence conditions. The possibility of this will be tested in court.
Exactly how closely linked s/w must be before you are obliged to go open-source yourself is not entirely clear to me either,
and this case may explore the issue, probably breaking new ground. In the past, the chancers have relied on the developers
not having the money to take action.
To those who claim that chess users who bought FF 'found value': they were not told that the product was a copy of a FoC product. It was pretended it was an improvement. Lots of chessplayers are poorly informed and vulnerable to deception.
As to how you can know the licence breach has taken place, if they are naive enough not to modify the stolen s/w, the binaries will be bitwise identical. Unless heavy editing has taken place, large chunks will be the same. Also, decompilers are available.
You can use open source functions without going open source yourself, but concealment/deception
are licence breaches. Fat Fritz was sold with false claims.
There are issues here I don't fully understand, it sounds as though some SF devs are trying to exclude
CB as distributors because they previously broke licence conditions. The possibility of this will be tested in court.
Exactly how closely linked s/w must be before you are obliged to go open-source yourself is not entirely clear to me either,
and this case may explore the issue, probably breaking new ground. In the past, the chancers have relied on the developers
not having the money to take action.
To those who claim that chess users who bought FF 'found value': they were not told that the product was a copy of a FoC product. It was pretended it was an improvement. Lots of chessplayers are poorly informed and vulnerable to deception.
As to how you can know the licence breach has taken place, if they are naive enough not to modify the stolen s/w, the binaries will be bitwise identical. Unless heavy editing has taken place, large chunks will be the same. Also, decompilers are available.