[As this is not a technical discussion by any means, -devel is not the appropriate mailing list. MFT: set to -legal. -project may also be appropriate.]
On Thu, 14 Apr 2005, Adrian Bunk wrote: > The following might sound absurd, but it seems to follow directly from > Debian's current interpretation of the DFSG: > > All GPL'ed programs have to go to non-free. There has always, and continues to be, an implicit exception for license texts in their capacity as a license, and *ONLY* in their capacity as a license. This particular issue has been dealt with before, in numerous discussions over this issue. Since it is rather trivial to distinguish between a random document and a document that is acting as a copyright statement or a valid license referenced by a copyright, if necessary, we can propose a GR to make this explicit. However, considering the fact that few people would actually argue against such a thing, I fail to see the point. [In fact, I submit that you aren't actually arguing against the inclusion of licensing texts either, but retreading this argument merely to argue against the idea that documentation requires the same set of freedoms that programs do.] {I'm too lazy to dig up the references to this right now, esp. since people.debian.org/~terpstra is broken, but search -vote around the time that the SC modification GR was being debated, specifically for my conversations with Anthony Towns.} Don Armstrong -- It has always been Debian's philosophy in the past to stick to what makes sense, regardless of what crack the rest of the universe is smoking. -- Andrew Suffield in [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.donarmstrong.com http://rzlab.ucr.edu
signature.asc
Description: Digital signature