[MFT: set to -legal again, since once more, this really has nothing to do with -devel.]
On Thu, 14 Apr 2005, John Hasler wrote: > Matthew Garrett writes: > > In general, the law doesn't allow us to modify the license attached to a > > piece of software. > > That has nothing to do with creating a derivative of a license for > use elsewhere. Sure, but then we would be distributing the license as a work in its own right, which is not (in general) what we are doing. To amplify this point, any licenses present in Debian that are not directly referenced by the copyright statement of a work distributed in Debian should be DFSG Free. [I'd argue additionally that these random licenses have no business being distributed in Debian at all, even if they were DFSG Free, but that's a separate matter.] Don Armstrong -- Our days are precious, but we gladly see them going If in their place we find a thing more precious growing A rare, exotic plant, our gardener's heart delighting A child whom we are teaching, a booklet we are writing -- Frederick Rükert _Wisdom of the Brahmans_ [Hermann Hesse _Glass Bead Game_] http://www.donarmstrong.com http://rzlab.ucr.edu
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