Hi, >>"George" == George Bonser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
George> Why do you continue to avoid the question? Debian has George> distributed Pine in non-free for about two years. As far as I George> can tell, Pine's license has not changed. Yes. We goofed. We made and distributed an illegal binary of Pine. We apologize, and hopwethis does not land us in a lawsuit. There. You have an answer. Satisfied? George> It is Debian's POLICY towards that license that has George> changed. THAT is what I want clarified. That happens not to be the case. The DFSG has not changed since its inception. And the DFSG clearly ratifies current behaviour. Sorry we made a mistake and did not correctly apply it to Pine. Hw many time do I have to apologize for that mistake? George> Pine is not a new package in the distribution nor is it in a George> new section of the distribution. Debian has had its policy for George> a long time. That is why the package has always been put in George> non-free. In error. I apologize yet again for doing so. George> Then will someone please answer the question? I just did. George> Shooting the messager does not fix the problem. All I want is George> an clear answer to the simply question: Why did Debian change George> their interpretation? Because we happened to actually read the licence now? We should have read it earlier, and for that I (yet again) apologize. I hope no one sues us for not yanking Pine earlier. George> No! I am trying to put the group BACK where it always HAS George> been. Sorry, that would be breaking the law, in our opinion. Since we are the ones facing litigation, pardon us for having less of the "Damn the torpedoes" point of view. I apologize for that too. George> I do not want to change its direction, I see it already George> changing and I am trying to put it BACK on course. I see a George> general change in attitude on the part of the developers that George> I think is incorrect and potentially damaging and want to try George> to correct it if possible. Please elucidate. We are willing to listen to anything that does not sound illegal (distributing modified binary PINE is close enough to being so that I shall be reluctant to change). George> I agreed with what the policy always had been before but I George> don't know if I agree with it now because nobody will spell George> out what that policy IS. The policy is still the DFSG. George> Please do not spout off what it says in the docs, it has said George> that all along. Sorry, but that is what it has been, and that is waht it is. George> I want to understand why, suddenly, licenses mean different George> things than they have in the past. Same license, same debian George> policy ... different interpretation. Why? What potential does George> that have for the rest of non-free? We made an error reading the licence before. I apologize. We shall look good and hard at all licences to make sure any other such errors are caught and excised before we make another major public error like distributing illegal binaries of pine. I guess we should apologize for being merely human, and erring. I do so apologize. George> Please answer the question. Pine has had that same license George> nearly forever. Debian has had the same policy. Pine was George> free-enough to go in non-free as a binary for a long time. George> Suddenly it is not. Why. Again, We made an error reading the licence before. I apologize. We shall try not to do so again. We are srry. We are very sorry. George> Wait, I missed something .. are you saying that Pine is George> without a maintainer? Or are you saying that the maintainer George> changed and the new maintainer inpterprets the license George> differently than the old one? If that is the case we can hope George> to possibly convince the new maintainer that he is full of George> hooey and put the binary back. I think that would make Debian George> the only major distribution that does not have a Pine binary George> package. Yes, Debian _is_ different. We are the only distribution that follows the DFSG. And this is no longer the interpretation of an individual. Anyone can look at the licence, look at the DFSG, look at the litigous nature of the United States, and, Like Santiago, ask the U of Wa, andreach the same conclusion. It shall now have to pass a review on the lists in order to be re-included. I think the possibility is faint. George> But Debian has also maintained a non-free portion for stuff George> that does not meet the condifitions of the dfsg. Are you George> saying that Debian is going to drop non-free and contrib? I am George> baffled. "The danger of having to remove it"? Huh? You seem George> confused. main is guaranteed to be 100% free. Non-free is George> guaranteed to be 100% non-free. I accepted that when I browse George> in the non-free archive. No, we shall not drop non-free and contrib. But there are things that do not even belong in non-free. Qmail and Pine debs are one. Gated is another. George> I think we are loosing focus here. The point is that Pine is George> one of the most popular Unix applications in the world. Pico George> is also usually a popular editor. To remove the Pine and Pico George> binaries is basicly to tell newbies "we don't really care George> about you and your use of the system is secondary to our George> stance on free software". That, I think, goes to far, but yes, we are committed to freedom of software, even to the extent of preffering free software to a better commercial alternative. I apologize for our convictions. George> This is backwards, of course, and the use of the system has to George> be the first consideration. Really? George> Without users, the best software in the world is useless. Your opinion. My software is uselful to me were I the only person to sue it. A lot of it is just that -- for my use. I code for Debian for the community -- and by that I mean people who espouse my viewpoints about sharing and contributing and freedom of software. Global market domination does not enter the picture. So, unlike capitalistic companies, I do think we pay more homage to our ideals than the maeket driven approach you sugges. George> If you make the cost of entry to debian too high for newbies, George> your user base might begin to shrivel. That would be a pity. But I am not going to abandon my principles for that. Why do you think I spen 50+hours a week on work, and another 30orso for Debian? For users who do not even share enough fo my viewpoint to be freinds? George> How is a raw newbie to unix coming from Win95 supposed to get George> pine and pico working now? I think much more has been lost George> than has been gained. Depends on your perspective. George> I have said my piece on the subject. I think it is a grave George> mistake. I also think that this subject will be revisited George> though I will not bring it up. This decision is the best thing George> to happen to Red Hat since the GUI control panel. I like red hat. I think they make a great OS. We are not in competition. I recommend them to all people. I happen to prefer Debian, but Debian is not for everyone. Red Hat is indeed better for a lot of people. Or Caledra. Or Suse. I am glad Red Hat benefits from our convictions. manoj -- One basic notion underlying Usenet is that it is a cooperative. Having been on USENET for going on ten years, I disagree with this. The basic notion underlying USENET is the flame. Chuq Von Rospach, [EMAIL PROTECTED] Manoj Srivastava <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <http://www.datasync.com/%7Esrivasta/> Key C7261095 fingerprint = CB D9 F4 12 68 07 E4 05 CC 2D 27 12 1D F5 E8 6E -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]