The suit is the first legal case in the US concerning the GPL, and could
further validate the licence as parties including
SCO and
Microsoft
have previously asserted that the
licence
is illegal and therefore non-binding.
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The BusyBox tools offer Unix utilities for embedded systems, and the software
is licensed under the GPLv2.
Although the GPLv2 allows developers to distribute the application free of
charge, they are required to publish the source code for any changes that they
make.
Monsoon Multimedia develops devices ranging from mobile appliances to Mpeg
compressors. Although its products use a modified version of the BusyBox
software, the lawsuit alleges that the firm refuses to publish the modified
code.
BusyBox demands an injunction that blocks Monsoon from further distributing
the software, as well as unspecified damages.
The BusyBox developers are represented by the
Software
Freedom Law Center which claims to have officially notified Monsoon about
the licence violation earlier this month.
Colin Stiles, Monsoon's executive vice president in charge of sales of
marketing, told
vnunet.com
that the firm had not received the legal complaint and could therefore not
comment.
Even though the case marks the first time that GPL developers have asked the
US courts to enforce the licence, it has been
repeatedly
upheld in Europe.
Harald Welte and Armijn Hemel, two developers from Germany and The
Netherlands respectively, are heading up the
GPL
Violations project.
Hemel brought
Cisco to its
knees earlier this year, forcing the networking giant to
publish source
code for GPL components that it uses in its
Linksys
iPhone.
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