| Something proprietary is something exclusively owned by someone, often with connotations that it is exclusive and
cannot be used by other parties without negotiations. It may specifically mean that something is covered by one or more patents, as in proprietary technology. It can also mean that the copyright is used in a way that restricts the users' freedoms.
Increasingly, proprietary architectures are seen as a disadvantage. Consumers prefer standardized and open architectures,
which allow them to mix and match products from different manufacturers.
Etymology
The word proprietary comes from the French
proprietaire, from the Latin proprietarius. Compare with the Latin
proprietas, property, and proprius, owned.
Proprietary software
Proprietary software is a kind of software where
end-users do not have the freedom to control
what it does and study or edit the source code. This is definition (http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/categories.html#ProprietarySoftware) has been popularised by
Richard Stallman, who is the leading figure in the promotion of
free software projects such as GNU.
Proprietary software, or non-free software is currently the
most globalized industry. For example Microsoft and Windows which dominate their
markets around the world.
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