ShadesOfGrey:
I had thought your primary goal was the former. So I wanted to see if you would apply the same petition to bPlan/MorphOS IF their licensing were as 'restrictive' as Amiga Inc.'s.
IF that indeed would be the case I would support a similar petition. But as far as we know today, and to judge from the Q/A quote you provided, no demands are to be made on hardware vendors (regardless of whether the hardware is "open" or "closed") in order to have MorphOS run on their products other than that specifications are supplied.
I'm not even sure of the relationship between bplan and the MorphOS team, and what kind of commercial entity that is. "MorphOS AG"? "MorphOS GmbH"? Is MorphOS the property of bplan? If MorphOS/bplan can be seen as one entity it would even make some kind of sense if they made Amiga Inc-like demands since they actually would be selling their own hardware in an Apple kind of way.
But again, the plans for distributing MorphOS have not been publicly presented AFAIK, and I have no reason to believe that they would do anything like this.
Amiga Inc. on the other hand has no hardware of its own, yet third party hardware vendors are expected to get licenses, provide license verification mechanisms and bundle AmigaOS. Of course that means that this "licensed" hardware is branched off from the rest of the market for the same hardware in its normal form.
Yes, you're right in that personally I'm primarily interested in AmigaOS, but naturally the size and development of and pricing in the hardware market which AmigaOS is dependent on affects AmigaOS and its users.
Thank you Seehund for clarifying your position.
No problem.

But OTOH, my personal opinions on anything aren't all that important in this case. I might think that AmigaOS should run on Zilog CPUs or that the Vatican should be sold to Uzbekistan. All that the petitioners have in common is that we publicly endorse only what is said in the petition. Nothing more, nothing less. That's the essence of a petition.