Yes, these are MySQL's words:

When your application is not licensed under either the GPL-compatible Free Software License as defined by the Free Software Foundation or approved by OSI, and you intend to or you may distribute MySQL software, you must first obtain a commercial license to the MySQL product.

In general, if a program uses a GPL'd peice of software, and does not link into or modify it, or use any of it's code, then its fine and does not get GPL'd.

The GPL is not viral and General Public Virus

Also from that page:

If you develop and distribute a commercial application and as part of utilizing your application, the end-user must download a copy of MySQL; for each derivative work, you (or, in some cases, your end-user) need a commercial license for the MySQL server and/or MySQL client libraries.

I don't know how MySQL get away with saying the above, because what they are saying is rubbish. Why can't another person download a copy of MySQL when it's GPL'd. I suppose it's the terms you except when you use it. That's why I use PostgreSQL, and for other obvious reasons.

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In reply to Re^4: Protecting our work by ghenry
in thread Protecting our work by bradcathey

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