• Bug#255955: Clarification of

    From Don Armstrong@1:229/2 to All on Tue Aug 17 12:30:11 2004
    From: [email protected]

    Jan-Henrik: I'm e-mailing you to see if you would be willing to clean
    up the following problem with the licensing of mmail and mmake (and
    any other packages) that you've intended to license under the GPL, but
    didn't make it perfectly clear. If you would be willing to okay the
    second copyright statement for use in mmake and mmail, that would be
    ideal. Alternatively, if you could extract the same language from the
    GPL section: licensing your work under the GPL, and respond to this
    bug, that would work as well.

    To clarify, since Thomas's first message sounded like he was talking
    about mmail only (not just mmake), the second issue is that the
    copyright statement doesn't actually license the work under the GPL,
    even though this is pretty clearly what the author intended.

    My original bug was that debian/copyright didn't actually include the
    following (I was auditing packages for something wolse when I ran
    across this.)

    COPYRIGHT GNUGPL (c) 1998-2001 Jan-Henrik Haukeland <[email protected]>

    Redistribution and use with or without modification, are permitted
    provided that the above copyright notice can be reproduced. Please see
    the enclosed GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE file for complete details.

    The above should read something like the following:

    Copyright 1998-2001 Jan-Henrik Haukeland <[email protected]>

    This file is part of mmake, and is released under the terms of the
    GPL version 2, or any later version, at your option. See the file
    README and COPYING for more information.

    if this is actually licensed under the GPL.

    As always, if there are any questions, or anything I can do to help,
    don't hesitate to ask.


    Don Armstrong

    --
    The sheer ponderousness of the panel's opinion ... refutes its thesis
    far more convincingly than anything I might say. The panel's labored
    effort to smother the Second Amendment by sheer body weight has all
    the grace of a sumo wrestler trying to kill a rattlesnake by sitting
    on it--and is just as likely to succeed.
    -- Alex Kozinski in Silveira V Lockyer

    http://www.donarmstrong.com
    http://rzlab.ucr.edu


    --
    To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [email protected]
    with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [email protected]

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)
  • From Thomas Bushnell BSG@1:229/2 to Don Armstrong on Tue Aug 17 23:10:08 2004
    From: [email protected]

    Don Armstrong <[email protected]> writes:

    My original bug was that debian/copyright didn't actually include the following (I was auditing packages for something wolse when I ran
    across this.)

    COPYRIGHT GNUGPL (c) 1998-2001 Jan-Henrik Haukeland <[email protected]>

    Redistribution and use with or without modification, are permitted
    provided that the above copyright notice can be reproduced. Please see
    the enclosed GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE file for complete details.

    The above should read something like the following:

    Copyright 1998-2001 Jan-Henrik Haukeland <[email protected]>

    This file is part of mmake, and is released under the terms of the
    GPL version 2, or any later version, at your option. See the file
    README and COPYING for more information.

    if this is actually licensed under the GPL.

    Oh, and what is particularly important: the license needs to be very
    clear just what files it applies to.

    The normal way to do that is to put this text at the front of every
    file, right next to the copyright notice. Or, if it is carried in a
    different file, then that file needs to name or otherwise identify
    exactly which files are covered by the license.

    Thomas


    --
    To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [email protected]
    with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [email protected]

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)