Ted and Jos?,
The FSF has a blog post here that might provide some insights:
http://www.fsf.org/blogs/licensing/time-to-act-on-tpp-is-now-rallies-against-tpp-in-washington-d-c-november-14-18
That is from last November, but the relevant passage, perhaps in a temporal
vacuum, seems to be the second paragraph with the following sentences focused on
the GPL:
"The regulation would not affect freely licensed software, such as software
under the GPL, that already comes with its own conditions ensuring users receive
source code. Such licenses are grants of permission from the copyright holders
on the work, who are not a "Party" to TPP."
The Software Freedom Conservancy has a post on this as well, from the same time
frame:
https://sfconservancy.org/blog/2015/nov/09/gpl-tpp/
Regards,
Marc
> On Feb 4, 2016, at 4:01 PM, Ted Harding <Ted.Harding at wlandres.net>
wrote:
>
> Saludos Jos?!
> Could you please give a summary of the relevant parts of TPP
> that might affect the use of R? I have looked up TPP on Wikipedia
> without beginning to understand what it might imply for the use of R.
> Best wishes,
> Ted.
>
> On 04-Feb-2016 14:43:29 Jos?? Bustos wrote:
>> Hi everyone,
>>
>> I have a question regarding the use R software under the new TPP laws
>> adopted by some governments in the region. Who know how this new
agreements
>> will affect researchers and the R community?
>>
>> Hope some of you knows better and can give ideas about it.
>>
>> saludos,
>> Jos??