Il December 4, 2018 6:04:59 AM UTC, Ben Finney <[email protected]> ha scritto: >If you want to release a work of software compatible with Debian, please >do everyone – yourself included – a huge favour and choose an existing, >well-understood, known-by-copyright-experts-to-be-effective free >license already used for many existing software works.
Hi Ben thanks for your advice. I know you mean well. It's not my intention to abuse the debian-legal mailing list, I was really looking for compatibility issues between the Hacking License and the DFSG in the hope to address them before the widespread adoption of the software it cover and the license. While the copyright attribution embedded in the Hacking License is designed to make updates to the license possible, I cannot be sure that the changes that Debian would require would be compatible with the rights granted to the users after the release, actually making the software incompatible with Debian (the upstream copyright attribution is terminated, like other grants, on violation of users rights). I appreciate the feedbacks shared so far by Debian Legal volunteers, and integrated them in the new version of the license to this aim. If no further incompatibility exists between the Hacking License and the DFSG, I will not annoy the list anymore. If, on the other hand, no new copyleft license is allowed to enter Debian, I'm fine with it, but I think this should be clearly stated somewhere in the social contract. Same if this is a problem of license authorship (because I'm neither a lawyer nor a committee) or affiliation. Ultimately, if "strongly discouraged" actually means "forbidden" I just need to know it. > However, you are strongly seeking feedback not on the work of software, > but on your new license text. No, let's be clear on this: I **welcome** all feedbacks about the license's text, but here I'm **seeking** just for _incompatibilities_with_DFSG_. I didn't release the software yet because it's innovative by itself and I need an appropriate license to more effectively protect the users' freedom in a strongly distributed computing platform. Giacomo

