When the GPLv3 first arrived, only a handful of programs made the shift. The most significant of these was Samba making good its promise to move its popular Windows-compatible file/print server program to the GPLv3.
Since then, according to data collected by Palamida, an IP (intellectual property) management company, the GPLv3 is picking up steam. By July 31, Palamida found that 277 open-source projects had moved to using the GPLv3. At the beginning of the month, only 82 projects, most of them created by the Free Software Foundation, which created the GPLv3, had made the switch.
Comments
Felipe Alvarez
2007-08-02 05:42:35
(g** == god)
Roy Schestowitz
2007-08-02 07:34:17
akf
2007-08-02 08:24:35
Ciaran O'Riordan
2007-08-02 08:24:59
Roy Schestowitz
2007-08-02 08:56:12
nanostream
2007-08-03 15:24:43
Roy Schestowitz
2007-08-03 16:28:26
nanostream
2007-08-03 21:20:50