Monsoon
Multimedia, which was being sued by the
Software
Freedom Law Center for violating the terms of the
General
Public Licence version 2 (GPL2), has settled out of court.
The company had used source code from the
BusyBox
application in its products, but had failed to publish the modified code under
the terms of GPL2.
The impending
case caused excitement and more than a little trepidation in the open source
community because the GPL2 has never been tested in a US court.
"Since we intend to, and always intended to, comply with all open source
software licence requirements, we are confident that the matter will be quickly
resolved," said Graham Radstone, chairman of Monsoon Multimedia.
The company will now enter into discussions with the Software Freedom Law
Center, and has stated that it will publish source code on its website in the
next few weeks to comply with the terms of the GPL2.
The BusyBox software was developed by open source activist
Bruce
Perens and is used in a variety of Linux devices. It allows coders to access
over 200 utilities without incurring a lot of heavy coding.
Comments
Have your say on this article