You're right Heinz. And it's what I've said since 1999 when me and some other dudes wanted Amiga to open source the OS. AROS wasn't that advanced back then. Anyhow, Amiga has used our patience, and there's nothing left in my camp. AROS is the way forth, no more being cut down. If you think about it, the Amiga curse could strike any closed source, *owned* Amiga effort, but not AROS. It can't be shut down, it can't be stopped, it's Open Source. So it's safe to lay your eggs there ;-)
When reading the McEwen interview, he said something like: If you've violated our IP, talk to us, or wait till our lawyers get you!. You will never need to violate any IP with AROS, knowingly or not. And when you're 70, you don't have to worry about being sued if you're booting AROS up in your x86/ppc/whatever emulation software. AROS is about thinking ahead.