Scripsit Lars Wirzenius <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > I strongly suggest we continue the current practice where the authors > get to choose their license as they wish.
Of course there is no other way we _can_ go. If somebody decides to write cool, useful OS infrastructure software and license it under the GPL for our use, it would be absurd and meaningless, not to say silly, to decide not to use said software simply because it it is GPL'ed. The license-related criterion for including things in Debian is that the license fits the DFSG, and the (interpretation of the) DFSG has been carefully crafted to admit the GPL. This must hold whether or not the somebody who writes the infrastructure software happens to be a Debian developer or an outsider. We're all volunteers as far as the project is concerned, and we cannot even theoretically by GR force a developer to release their work under a license they don't want to. The only thing we could, in principle do, was not to use their software, but if the GPL is good enough for our principal kernel, our principal C compiler and toolchain, our basic unix toolsuite, emacs, et cetera, we would be fools to let good infrastructure code lie unused simply because of the GPL. -- Henning Makholm "He who joyfully eats soup has already earned my contempt. He has been given teeth by mistake, since for him the intestines would fully suffice." -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]