Humberto Massa GuimarĂ£es wrote: > And this is my problem with the inclusion of MF's trademark usage in > our package: the right to include such trademark *is* attached to > the program (after all, it's the original name of the program (**)); > it's a right that *must* *not* *depend* on the program's being part > of a Debian system. One *must* be capable of extracting the program > from Debian and use it, or distribute it, without debian, but > otherwise within the terms of the program's license -- which > obviously (at least IMHO) includes the license to the trademarks > originally included in the program.
You must be free to do so, and you are free to do so. If you further modify it, you have to follow the terms of the license. One of those terms is that you change the name, and that is perfectly acceptable under the DFSG. All that has happened, as far as I can tell, is that the Mozilla Foundation waved the requirement for Debian to change the name. Granting additional rights shouldn't make something less free. > >>It does /not/ prohibit Debian the organization from having rights >>that other people don't. It is unreasonable to read it that way, >>because Debian will *always* have additional rights in some works, >>for example those which it is author or copyright holder of. > > > You are 100% right. But this is irrelevant, because you ignored the > context of my phrase. The relevant (contextualized) meaning of my > phrase above is: > > premise 1 => DFSG #8 classifies as non-free software that has *any* > rights attached to it that depends on the software be distributed in > Debian. As long as we're being technical about the meaning of DFSG 8, I might as well point out that, technically, the Mozilla Foundation has offered additional permission for software prepared by Debian. If Debian decided to distribute Mozilla Firefox outside of Debian-the-OS, that permission would still apply. > > premise 2 => Mozilla Foundation Firefox trademark, which is present > to be displayed in the usage of the firefox browser as it comes > originally, has a restrictive license that either (a) forbids it to > be used by Debian or (b) allows it to be used by Debian and Debian > only, according to our acceptance or not of their offer of exclusive > trademark licensing. > > conclusion => non-rebranded Firefox is not Free Software as per the > DFSG. DFSG explicitly allows the license to require the software be renamed if modified. Hence, non-rebranded Firefox is free though without the additional trademark license, we might not be able modify it and keep the name [as you note, I'm not sure if trademark law actually requires us to rename it, especially for minor changes]. But that's only discouraged, not non-free. > This is a fairly simple conclusion, and no "historically the DFSG > was made thinking about copyrights only" argument contradicts what > is precisely stated there. I agree with this part: Claims that the DFSG applies only to copyrights are not correct; the DFSG must apply to the entire, aggregate licence to the software, no matter what area of law it is made under: Otherwise, we are not actually protecting the freedoms of our users, in violation of the Social Contract. But the DFSG generally wouldn't apply to trademarks, because trademarks are names, and names are exempted explicitly from the DFGS. > > Even taking the DFSG #4 concession, what is being asked from the MF > is not a rename of the program (in which case the version in Debian > could be called firefox-debianized or somesuch), but a complete > purge of the trademark from the visible part of the program > (including menu items, etc), which goes IMHO clearly beyond the > DFSG #4 exception. The DFSG 4 exception talks about "a different name", not "a different package name," "a different file name," or any other similar technical concept. The name of a program is a human concept, and should be understood as allowing the license to require a change in what the user will perceive the name to be, not just what the packaging system calls it. That includes changing that every window says "Mozilla Firefox" in the title bar; that the Help menu says "About Firefox" and displays a dialogue with the name Firefox prominently displayed as the program's name, etc. Now, it may be that we don't think that should be free. If so, though, we need to change the DFSG. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]