On 24 Mar 2006, Thien-Thi Nguyen verbalised: > Manoj Srivastava <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > >> It also seems to be the norm for documentation that seems to >> be coming from the GNU project, so I think my take on this is >> correct -- _ALL_ those documents can't all have the exact same >> oversight. > > it's ok to posit a hypothesis. what steps have you taken to test > it? a program's source expresses its intention, but a programmer's? > (how can you know the true intention of people without talking to > them?)
Copyrights and licenses are legal matters, and a court would look at the license, not an interpretation of intentions. I am doing my upstream the courtesy of assuming they know what they are doing, and taking the license terms as written. > if a program needs to DTRT but doesn't, a programmer can fix it by > changing its source. but what if a programmer is in the same > situation? Debian has been talking to the FSF about these issues since 2002 that I know of, and there has been a formally delegated negotiating team since the winter of 2003. I would think that people are aware of these issues, and Debian's unease with the license. After half a decade of talking around about it, don't you think one should accept that people actually do know what their license terms mean? manoj -- Many Myths are based on truth Spock, "The Way to Eden", stardate 5832.3 Manoj Srivastava <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <http://www.debian.org/%7Esrivasta/> 1024D/BF24424C print 4966 F272 D093 B493 410B 924B 21BA DABB BF24 424C -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]