>From DFSG FAQ Draft ( http://people.debian.org/~bap/dfsg-faq.html ):
Q: How can I tell if a license is a free software license, by Debian's standards? A: The process involves human judgement. The DFSG is an attempt to articulate our criteria. But the DFSG is not a contract. This means that if you think you've found a "loophole" in the DFSG then you don't quite understand how this works. The DFSG is a potentially imperfect attempt to express what "freeness" in software means to Debian. It is not something whose letter we argue about. It is not a law. Rather, it is a set of guidelines. Miry --- Marco d'Itri <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> escribió: > On Jul 03, Jacobo Tarrio <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > Not the only criteria. People are very inventive when it comes to > creating > > new software licenses with new restrictions which fit the letter of the > DFSG > > because, hey, the DFSG say nothing about licenses that make you cut off a > > part of your own body every time you download the software! > Bullshit. The only criteria for defining freedom for the purposes of > Debian *is* the DFSG. > It's this attitude of "DFSG is not restrictive enough, let's invent a > few new restrictions which we like" that is screwing Debian (and our > users). ______________________________________________ LLama Gratis a cualquier PC del Mundo. Llamadas a fijos y móviles desde 1 céntimo por minuto. http://es.voice.yahoo.com -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]