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You misunderstood me - while technically possible, the ability to incorporate GPL software into proprietary software products is severely restricted. And yes, having to use out-of-process extensions to avoid the GPL propagation to proprietary code is limiting.
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GPL restricts usage and is a close cousin of those non-commercial licenses. Permissive licenses do exist. Complying with licenses is itself a choice. GPL violation is the software equivalent of pirating a movie. Many people choose not to respect software licenses anyway.
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Part of what you have to take into account when choosing licensing is that the rules you set are easily violated. You depend on the state enforcing your copyright monopoly by going after people through the legal system. I've had enough of the legal system and copyright already.
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I'm not going to take an approach or choose a license based on that model. I don't think copyright should exist at all and think the negatives far outweigh the positives especially after seeing first hand how it hinders my work but yet many bad actors just entirely ignore it.
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GPL advocates are inherently copyright advocates. The premise that copyleft undermines or subverts copyright is a joke. It's just copyright in the usual form, restricting what people can do and needing to be enforced through the legal system. Only helps people with money/power.
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Copyright monopoly enforced by the state will always empower the rich and powerful. GPL is part of that system. Copyleft doesn't subvert copyright but rather supports it and depends on it. GPL supports and reinforces existing power structures. It didn't tear them down.
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Those laws and the legal system are a major part of how the strong dominate the weak rather than how you're portraying it. GPL was originally intended to subvert copyright but it doesn't do that. It's just another form of it with the same problems.
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