+1
They talk about patents, property and rights. It may apply to the tools you developed for visido and perhaps the concept of vsido as a whole. But the majority of the software was developed by other authors. I really don't know. I'm a law layman, but the way I see it, let's say Redhat as an example of a commercial distro, they ask for money for the support. They cannot sell OS licenses as far as I know. They are not proprietary of most part of the included software.
They talk about patents, property and rights. It may apply to the tools you developed for visido and perhaps the concept of vsido as a whole. But the majority of the software was developed by other authors. I really don't know. I'm a law layman, but the way I see it, let's say Redhat as an example of a commercial distro, they ask for money for the support. They cannot sell OS licenses as far as I know. They are not proprietary of most part of the included software.