Da wir uns seit einiger Zeit mit den Themen Softwarepatente, EUCD und TCPA beschäftigen, ist diese Mail nicht ganz uninteressant. Sie wurde auf die ML von SoftwareLibero.it weitergeleitet.
Soviel ich verstanden habe, leider habe ich den Thread in den Mailarchiven nicht gefunden, will Linux Torvalds DRM (Digital Rights Management, hat mit TCPA zu tun), im Linux-Kernel unterstützen.
Wenn jemand mehr Infos hat oder findet, bitte schicken!
Happy hacking! Patrick
----- Forwarded message from Linus Torvalds torvalds@transmeta.com ---
From: Linus Torvalds torvalds@transmeta.com Date: Wed, 23 Apr 2003 20:59:45 -0700 (PDT) To: Kernel Mailing List linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org Subject: Flame Linus to a crisp! X-Spam-Status: No, hits=-5.8 required=5.0 tests=USER_AGENT_PINE,X_MAILING_LIST autolearn=ham version=2.53
Ok, there's no way to do this gracefully, so I won't even try. I'm going to just hunker down for some really impressive extended flaming, and my asbestos underwear is firmly in place, and extremely uncomfortable.
I want to make it clear that DRM is perfectly ok with Linux!
There, I've said it. I'm out of the closet. So bring it on...
I've had some private discussions with various people about this already, and I do realize that a lot of people want to use the kernel in some way to just make DRM go away, at least as far as Linux is concerned. Either by some policy decision or by extending the GPL to just not allow it.
In some ways the discussion was very similar to some of the software patent related GPL-NG discussions from a year or so ago: "we don't like it, and we should change the license to make it not work somehow".
And like the software patent issue, I also don't necessarily like DRM myself, but I still ended up feeling the same: I'm an "Oppenheimer", and I refuse to play politics with Linux, and I think you can use Linux for whatever you want to - which very much includes things I don't necessarily personally approve of.
The GPL requires you to give out sources to the kernel, but it doesn't limit what you can _do_ with the kernel. On the whole, this is just another example of why rms calls me "just an engineer" and thinks I have no ideals.
[ Personally, I see it as a virtue - trying to make the world a slightly better place _without_ trying to impose your moral values on other people. You do whatever the h*ll rings your bell, I'm just an engineer who wants to make the best OS possible. ]
In short, it's perfectly ok to sign a kernel image - I do it myself indirectly every day through the kernel.org, as kernel.org will sign the tar-balls I upload to make sure people can at least verify that they came that way. Doing the same thing on the binary is no different: signing a binary is a perfectly fine way to show the world that you're the one behind it, and that _you_ trust it.
And since I can imaging signing binaries myself, I don't feel that I can disallow anybody else doing so.
Another part of the DRM discussion is the fact that signing is only the first step: _acting_ on the fact whether a binary is signed or not (by refusing to load it, for example, or by refusing to give it a secret key) is required too.
But since the signature is pointless unless you _use_ it for something, and since the decision how to use the signature is clearly outside of the scope of the kernel itself (and thus not a "derived work" or anything like that), I have to convince myself that not only is it clearly ok to act on the knowledge of whather the kernel is signed or not, it's also outside of the scope of what the GPL talks about, and thus irrelevant to the license.
That's the short and sweet of it. I wanted to bring this out in the open, because I know there are people who think that signed binaries are an act of "subversion" (or "perversion") of the GPL, and I wanted to make sure that people don't live under mis-apprehension that it can't be done.
I think there are many quite valid reasons to sign (and verify) your kernel images, and while some of the uses of signing are odious, I don't see any sane way to distinguish between "good" signers and "bad" signers.
Comments? I'd love to get some real discussion about this, but in the end I'm personally convinced that we have to allow it.
Btw, one thing that is clearly _not_ allowed by the GPL is hiding private keys in the binary. You can sign the binary that is a result of the build process, but you can _not_ make a binary that is aware of certain keys without making those keys public - because those keys will obviously have been part of the kernel build itself.
So don't get these two things confused - one is an external key that is applied _to_ the kernel (ok, and outside the license), and the other one is embedding a key _into_ the kernel (still ok, but the GPL requires that such a key has to be made available as "source" to the kernel).
Linus
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----- End forwarded message -----
Soviel ich verstanden habe, leider habe ich den Thread in den Mailarchiven nicht gefunden, will Linux Torvalds DRM (Digital Rights Management, hat mit TCPA zu tun), im Linux-Kernel unterstützen.
Wenn jemand mehr Infos hat oder findet, bitte schicken!
Torvalds meinte bloss, dass der Linux Kernel und DRM keine prinzip bedingten Probleme miteinander haben.
Zumindest dann nicht, wenn DRM nicht auf eine Weise implementiert ist, die auf Verschleierung setzt - die waere im linux Kernel nicht moeglich.
Er sieht DRM als neutrale Technologie ein. Dabei gebe ich ihm uebrigens Recht.
Dass viel Implementierungen von DRM durchwegs missbraucht werden um den Wettbewerb zu verzerren (Stichwort "Palladium") stimmt auch, aber deswegen DRM gaenzlich abzulehenen, waere ungefaehr gleich naiv wie Verschluesselung gaenzlich abzulehen (hat auch schon mal wer probiert, ist in die Hose gegangen).
Bye, Chris.
hallo
On Wed, 2003-04-30 at 11:28, chrism@desk.nl wrote:
Soviel ich verstanden habe, leider habe ich den Thread in den Mailarchiven nicht gefunden, will Linux Torvalds DRM (Digital Rights Management, hat mit TCPA zu tun), im Linux-Kernel unterstützen.
Wenn jemand mehr Infos hat oder findet, bitte schicken!
Torvalds meinte bloss, dass der Linux Kernel und DRM keine prinzip bedingten Probleme miteinander haben.
ja ich sehe das auch so. es handelt sich ja weniger um rights management sondern eher um digital restriction management. also es geht nicht darum festzulegen was ein benutzer ueberhaupt darf sondern was er nicht darf bzw nur eingeschraenkt darf.
und genau in dem punkt ist linux eigentlich nicht so brilliant. das rechtesystem ist unflexibel. eine moeglichkeit zu unterstuetzen einzelnen dateien nicht nur auf dem system selber eine bessere zugriffskontrolle zu geben sondern auch darueber hinaus ist eigentlich schon wuenschenswert. vor allem wenns mit dem heutigen stand der technik machbar ist. man muss es dann ja nicht verwenden.
dieser weg sollte halt dann schon offengehalten werden.
peter