> Now let's say somebody in a corp uses the software for some minor task. Are they allowed? Is it the person or the corp "using" it? Not allowed. >If the latter, let's say me and my buddy both use the software…
The license is only granted to natural born persons. The only people who don't grasp this simple fact are the ones who have never worked in a corporation. They very much own and run things legally. Which is why when the…
>Corporations don't exist. Amazon is made of people: shareholders and staff. >Software doesn't run itself and corporations don't run software: human beings do. >There's no such thing as a non-human entity running…
The best I've been able to come up is that freedom 0 applies only to humans. If a non-human entity is running the software, viz. some sort of corporation, then it is not allowed to without a (expensive) license. I want…
> Now let's say somebody in a corp uses the software for some minor task. Are they allowed? Is it the person or the corp "using" it? Not allowed. >If the latter, let's say me and my buddy both use the software…
The license is only granted to natural born persons. The only people who don't grasp this simple fact are the ones who have never worked in a corporation. They very much own and run things legally. Which is why when the…
>Corporations don't exist. Amazon is made of people: shareholders and staff. >Software doesn't run itself and corporations don't run software: human beings do. >There's no such thing as a non-human entity running…
The best I've been able to come up is that freedom 0 applies only to humans. If a non-human entity is running the software, viz. some sort of corporation, then it is not allowed to without a (expensive) license. I want…