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- <TITLE>Untitled Document - What Is Copyleft?</TITLE>
- <P>Go to the <A HREF="gnu_bulletin_3.html">previous</A>, <A HREF="gnu_bulletin_5.html">next</A> section.<P>
- <H1><A NAME="SEC4" HREF="gnu_bulletin_toc.html#SEC4">What Is Copyleft?</A></H1>
- <P>
- The simplest way to make a program free is to put it in the public
- domain, uncopyrighted. But this allows anyone to copyright and restrict
- its use against the author's wishes, thus denying others the right to
- access and freely redistribute it. This completely perverts the
- original intent.<P>
- To prevent this, we copyright our software in a novel manner. Typical
- software companies use copyrights to take away your freedoms. We use
- the <DFN>copyleft</DFN> to preserve them. It is a legal instrument that
- requires those who pass on the program to include the rights to further
- redistribute it, and to see and change the code; the code and rights
- become legally inseparable.<P>
- The copyleft used by the GNU Project is made from a combination of a
- regular copyright notice and the <DFN>GNU General Public License</DFN> (GPL).
- The GPL is a copying license which basically says
- that you have the freedoms discussed above. An alternate form, the
- <DFN>GNU Library General Public License</DFN> (LGPL), applies to certain GNU
- Libraries. This license permits linking the libraries into proprietary
- executables under certain conditions. The appropriate license is
- included in all GNU source code distributions and in many of our
- manuals. We will also send you a printed copy upon request.<P>
- <P>Go to the <A HREF="gnu_bulletin_3.html">previous</A>, <A HREF="gnu_bulletin_5.html">next</A> section.<P>
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