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Free Software movement sees the restrictions in the GPL as being justified by being for the greater good. The advocates of non-commercial licenses see things the same way with their restrictive licenses. There will be other restrictive license movements based on other values.
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Some people don't want their software being used as part of waging war, policing, etc. Going to be lots of license restrictions and attempts to push them. GPL created the conditions for people to see this as something that makes sense. Most projects moving to these were GPL.
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Non-commercial licenses, etc. are the evolution of what people wanted from GPL and why they were using it. Vast majority of developers using it were doing it in a misguided attempt to get sustainability and contributions back to the project. Includes biggest adopters like Linux.
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People like Linus never bought into the Free Software movement. The vast majority of large projects using GPL never cared. Many of those are now going to move on to restrictive licenses. It's not just companies. A lot of other smaller projects are starting to move too.
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Vast majority of people already moved on to just using MIT, BSD, Apache 2, etc. and a lot of the major projects still using GPL are now moving to these non-commercial licenses if they're in a position to do it. It's why they used it in the first place: restricting usage.
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Linux kernel GPLv2-only ecosystem is much different from the Free Software movement / ideology. They have a totally different take on what the license means, what it accomplishes and why it should be used. Linux kernel, Git, etc. aren't part of the Free Software movement.
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I don't see the same thing as you in that text. I see him saying that he chose it as a way to force people to give back to the project and to avoid fragmentation. They see GPLv2 + rapidly changing internal APIs as a way to force contributing to Linux, not 'user freedom' stuff.
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