"No right to relicense this project" - on changing the license of Mark Pilgrim's chardet from LGPL to MIT after a vibe-coded rewrite
https://lemmy.ml/post/44059976

"No right to relicense this project" - on changing the license of Mark Pilgrim's chardet from LGPL to MIT after a vibe-coded rewrite - Lemmy
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/44059967
[https://lemmy.ml/post/44059967] > for those not familiar with Mark Pilgrim
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Pilgrim], he is/was a prolific author,
blogger, and hacker who abruptly disappeared from the internet in 2011. > >
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.bestiver.se/post/968527
[https://lemmy.bestiver.se/post/968527] > > > HN comments
[https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47259177]
Isn’t the LGPL supposed to be relicensable as opposed to GPL’s share-alike?
nope, here *GPL acts like cancer, once it touches something, it remains *GPL until the last bit of it is still there.
Cancer is a bad analogy. It’s more like antibodies against non-free bactetia :)
I have a completely different view of what free means. xGPL are restrictive and sticky.
Ok, maybe explain the restrictions that offend you so much?
GPL licenses are straight-up cancer, they force every derivative or linked project to adopt their viral copyleft rules, nuking proprietary reuse or easy mixing with other codebases, while a weird GPL cult preaches it as the one true path to “openness” and “freedom”. As someone who codes purely for fun, I like the dead-simple clarity of MIT and BSD: just keep the notice and license text, then do whatever the hell you want. No GPL bullshit or compliance headaches for me, permissive licenses like these keep my sanity intact.