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In message HBEEKNPPKIMFLJHGHNHMOEBLCBAA.jason@tommyk.com, "Jason Gurtz" writes:
As long as none of the proprietary code is used in Open BIOS, what whould be the harm?
Even looking at the proprietary code, then working on anything similar such as the free version is enough to get one sued, at least here in the USA. That's why way back when the Phoenix folks had to do a complete "clean-room" re-implementation of the IBM BIOS, and *still* had to deal with legal hassles.
If you really need to look at the proprietary code, you should contact its owner and cut a deal of some sort. Looking at this sort of code without some sort of license or agreement can leave you, and worse, anyone who hires you, in a legal pickle.
It's far better to ask questions of someone with legal access to the code and use their answers (but no code) to work on OpenBIOS.
-- Parag Patel - To unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@freiburg.linux.de with 'unsubscribe openbios' in the body of the message