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I like the idea of free software. But when reading the articles about selling and definition of free software there is one point I don't understand:

"The freedom to redistribute copies so you can help your neighbor"

If I sell my free software to a big company I think it's ok for them to use my software on as many PCs as they want without paying a licence fee.

But I don't want that company A that paid for my software gives a free copy to another company.

So, is this still free software, is this handled in the GNU licence or how do I have to imagine this?

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38% accept rate
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You have to contact a lawyer to answer this. – adamantium Jul 1 at 13:24
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belongs-on-licenseoverflow or lawyerfault ;-) – fretje Jul 1 at 13:30
What they said. This is a legal question. – Chris Lively Jul 1 at 13:35
@closed: If you close this you can delete tags like GNU, software, open-source and freesoftware in general, too. – Inno Jul 1 at 14:52

closed as not programming related by Mark Biek, Chris Lively, chaos, Thomas Owens, Robert S. Jul 1 at 13:50

4 Answers

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Technically you could licenese your source code under the GPL and still restrict redistribution of the binaries you supply. Of course if the company you sold the program to asks for the source you must supply it and you cannot stop them from compiling that source and distributing the resulting binaries, but they cannot distribute 'your' binaries without your permission.

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Technically in this case these binaries are not free software, only the source. – Mnementh Jul 1 at 13:46
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You cannot sell free software, it's free!

Richard Stallman quote:

The explanation for "free software" is simple--a person who has grasped the idea of "free speech, not free beer" will not get it wrong again.

If you want to sell your software, you'r not looking for GNU.

But you can still sell your software even under GNU licence. Take RedHat company, they licence Red Hat Enterprise Linux under GNU but still sell it to other companies. They sell their work not the Linux code.

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Hey why the downvotes? The guy is right, isn't he? – fretje Jul 1 at 13:31
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You have completeky misunderstood RMS, who made an initial living by selling copies of his free software EMACS. Free means the freedom to change, not the price. – Neil Butterworth Jul 1 at 13:33
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@fretje No, he is wrong. Lots of people sell free software - look at Read Hat, for example. – Neil Butterworth Jul 1 at 13:33
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Nope, he's wrong when he says you cannot sell free software. Many people and companies do and it's perfectly fine and accepted. – dagw Jul 1 at 13:35
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And to the people who upvoted this ... why? – Neil Butterworth Jul 1 at 13:35
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No, that's not free software anymore. You can certainly sell software to companies with a license that allows them use/edit the software freely but restrict the freedom to redistribute, just not with the GNU licenses.

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If you don't want them giving it away to other people, then it isn't really free software. I think what you are looking for is more like a site license - you pay once and you can use it on as many computers as you want, as long as they're YOUR computers.

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