Scripsit "Jaldhar H. Vyas" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > On Thu, 3 Nov 2005, Thiemo Seufer wrote:
>>> Why do programs written specifically for Debian such as dpkg or apt, >>> have a license which is not compatible with some other DFSG-compliant >>> licenses? >> Because the authors chose so. > Obviously. But the question was why they chose to do so when it goes > against the spirit of the DFSG? The GPL most emphatically does *not* go against the spirit of the DFSG. A very good first approximation to DFSG's concept of freedom is that 1. The GPL, version 2, is a free license. 2. The BSD license is also a free license. 3. Licenses that are "sufficiently similar" to the GPL or to the BSD license, or that lie somewhere in between them, are also free. Nobody have yet convinced me that this is not by design. Debian, and the free software community at large, is amicably divided between those who under no circumstances want their work used in proprietary software (and who thus favor the GPL) and those who just want their work to be reused as widely as possible (and who thus favor BSD-like licenses). The big compromise that allows the division to remain amicable and Debian to function as a conherent project - if you wish, the true underlying "spirit of the DFSG" - is this: Neither of these two sides get to say that the other side is wrong, not in the context of Debian. We accept *both* styles of license equally and do not *as a project* favor one over the other. People who *as individuals* contribute code get to decide which one they prefer. Drop this premise, and our project will fall apart. -- Henning Makholm "... popping pussies into pies Wouldn't do in my shop just the thought of it's enough to make you sick and I'm telling you them pussy cats is quick ..." -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]