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MySQL refines its GPL licensing scheme under MySQL 5.0 and MySQL 5.1

MySQL has today refined its licensing scheme from “GPLv2 or later” to “GPLv2 only“, in order to make it an option, not an obligation for the company to move to GPLv3.

Specifically, this means that copyright notice in the MySQL source code files will change from referring to “either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version” to “version 2” only, in the MySQL 5.0 and MySQL 5.1 code bases.

Six years ago in the summer of 2000, when MySQL AB licensed its software under the GPL, our founders David Axmark and Michael Widenius made this choice because the GPL was a license followed and respected by everyone. We have kept to it, because the GPL is the most palatable license, and poses the least friction for our user base.

MySQL has been part of the GPLv3 Committee B advising FSF since the GPLv3 draft was announced in January 2006. For GPLv3, we have seen fantastic improvements and hope for GPLv3 to spread. Even though my activity level as co-chair for Committee B was by far higher in the spring than what it has been in the past few months, MySQL AB continues to work with the FSF for GPLv3 to be the new, widespread license under which Free Software is licensed. However, now, until we get clear and strong indications for the general acceptance of GPLv3 over GPLv2, we feel comfortable with a specific GPLv2 reference in our license.

I have been in contact on the topic with Professor Eben Moglen, General Counsel for the Free Software Foundation, and Chairman of Software Freedom Law Center. He has emailed me:

I appreciate MySQL’s thoughtful contribution to the GPLv3 drafting process, showing how a business model and an entire company can be built around Free Software. Looking at recent developments and announcements, I believe MySQL will soon be in a position to see the GPLv3 being adopted over GPLv2 by various Free Software projects.

This entry was posted on Friday, December 22nd, 2006 at 17:36 and is filed under GPL, Licensing, MySQL. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

7 Responses to “MySQL refines its GPL licensing scheme under MySQL 5.0 and MySQL 5.1”

  1. tecosystems » links for 2007-01-05 Says:
    January 5th, 2007 at 8:37

    [...] Kaj Arnö’s blog » Blog Archive » MySQL refines its GPL licensing scheme under MySQL 5.0 and MySQL 5.1 “MySQL has today refined its licensing scheme from “GPLv2 or later” to “GPLv2 only“, in order to make it an option, not an obligation for the company to move to GPLv3.” - interesting decision, made possible by the dual license model (tags: GPL GPLv2 GPLv3 MySQL licensing opensource dual) [...]

  2. Jaslabs: High performance php » Should mysql be using GPLV3? Says:
    January 5th, 2007 at 16:00

    [...] In a recent announcement: [...]

  3. Red Hat » links for 2007-01-05 Says:
    January 5th, 2007 at 21:38

    [...] MySQL opts for GPLv2-only So that they can decide whether to use GPLv3 or not once it’s finished rather than being committed in advance. (tags: MySQL license FOSS GPL GPLv3 opensource) [...]

  4. MySQL GPL version 3 - Real Geek Says:
    January 5th, 2007 at 23:21

    [...] “MySQL AB continues to work with the Free Software Foundation for GPLv3 to be the new widespread licence under which free software is licensed,” Arnö wrote in a blog posting in December. [...]

  5. Daily Scrapbook » Blog Archive » MySQL Changes License To Avoid GPLv3 Says:
    January 8th, 2007 at 21:07

    [...] Links: 0. http://www.businessreviewonline.com/os/archives/2007/01/mysql_changes_l.html 1. http://www.planetmysql.org/kaj/?p=81 [...]

  6. karthi Says:
    November 14th, 2007 at 14:33

    Then is Mysql5.0 and 5.1(GPLv2) compatible with GPLv3 compatible softwares.(can apachetomcat(only gpl3) be combined with mysql(only gpl2)to form a single software(a website)?

  7. kaj Says:
    November 15th, 2007 at 8:38

    Yes, you can freely combine Apache Tomcat and MySQL.

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