@clacke Yeah at least from what I've seen of him when he pops up in my news and discussion readings, Florian Mueller always seemed like he takes too much delight in being contrarian to actually offer objective analysis, especially about this case where he seems to have staked out some staunchly contrarian positions early on and doggedly stuck to them.
From my reading of things at least, a (or perhaps the) core recurring mistake that Mueller seems to make (or, to be less charitable, perhaps just the tool he uses to arrive at smugly idiosyncratic opinions) is that he reads some odd interpretation into licenses or implications of laws that licensors, licensees, and judiciaries all haven't hitherto seen or believed and then concludes this is some big gotcha that's gonna blow up at some point. And it never does, because of course the law isn't some immutable thing outside of all society that one can find some hack in the matrix for; it's *made up of* that interplay of participants and legal practices!
The most charitable interpretation I can think of is that perhaps because he's not coming from a Common Law jurisdiction like the U.S. he's not really groking how important precedent is in American law, but then maybe he shouldn't be so stridently opining on it ;) And from my (admittedly basic) understanding of German law it's not actually markedly more open to big "gotchas!" that change the meaning of a contract despite all parties involved actually having a demonstrably different interpretation historically . . .
Adversarial compatibility is too important to sacrifice for some thin hope that intellectual monopoly overreach might sometimes have some positive side-effect.