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Hi :)
+1

Plus i personally tend to feel that winning users from OpenOffice is a very short-term win.  It's 
very easy to switch between AOO and LO and back again both as a product and as a member of a 
community.  Much the same with any of the OpenSource products and even freeware.  Most of those 
have been migrating to LO anyway just because it's a better product.  The real longer-term wins are 
people that are still only using MS Office and so are not used to being part of a community.  
People that do take the 1st step in migrating away from MSO by having LO (or other) alongside their 
existing MSO will tend to drift comfortably towards using LO more and more.  Just my own thoughts 
and i am not even a member of TDF or anything.  

Regards from
Tom :)  




----- Original Message -----
From: Charles-H. Schulz <charles.schulz@documentfoundation.org>
To: "marketing@global.libreoffice.org" <marketing@global.libreoffice.org>
Cc: 
Sent: Monday, 31 December 2012, 22:28
Subject: Re: [libreoffice-marketing] LO vs AOO : GPL/LGPL vs ASL licences

Folks 

I would really avoid to compare such a delicate matter as licences unless you 
are a lawyer. And even then that's not marketing but rather legal advice.

Thanks,

Charles.


Jay Lozier <jslozier@gmail.com> a écrit :

On 12/31/2012 02:40 PM, Immanuel Giulea wrote:
 Hello all,

 In the marketing materials that I am writing covering LO vs AOO, I
was
 wondering if it would be relevant to go into an explanation about why
the
 GPL/LGPL licence used by LO was superior to the ASL as a "true 
open
source".

 I found this great document that explains the three "most 
common"
licences:
 ASL, GPL and LGPL (MPL is not included) (1, 2)

 Any thoughts on how relevant it would be to extract some of the
information
 and apply it on the materials?


 Cheers and Happy New Year

 Immanuel

 (1)

http://www.openlogic.com/Portals/172122/docs/understanding-the-three-most-common-open-source-licenses.pdf
 (2) http://www.slideshare.net/slideshow/embed_code/10518967

Reviewing the Openlogic information I think we should compare the 
GPL/LGPL with the typical proprietary license not the ASL. The 
differences between the ASL and GPL/LGPL while important are, IMHO,
more 
a matter of degree than kind. Both are intended to be user friendly and

allow user modifications and access to the source code that the typical

proprietary license does not allow.

Comparing GPL/LGPL to a proprietary license

1. GPL gives users complete access to the source code. This allows
users 
to compile the code for another platform, modify the code, or extend
the 
code as they see fit. Proprietary code does not allow any access to the

source code.

2. GPL license implies the unrestricted installation of the program 
without cost to the user. Proprietary licenses have varying
restrictions 
on the number of allowed installations.

3. FOSS projects have free, unlimited user support from dedicated users

with some form of question and answer interaction between the user and 
responder(s). Some projects also have commercial support available. 
Proprietary software often does not have free user forums or user lists

where anyone can ask a question and get answers. Typically, proprietary

software offers knowledge base articles and paid support.

4. Most GPL licensed projects promote contributions from all interested

individuals. This community, often worldwide, brings a broader 
perspective to the project even if the actual code development is done 
by relatively few individuals. Proprietary projects can have problems 
with gaining a sufficiently broad perspective because the developers
are 
more isolated from the end users during development.

-- 
Jay Lozier
jslozier@gmail.com


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