On Thu, Nov 12, 2009 at 09:28:59PM +0000, David Claughton wrote: [...] > You might want to, but AFAICT you would not be able to distribute > the result if the user cannot be told how to get the source to the > AGPL parts you included. That doesn't mean the original software > isn't DFSG free, at least I don't see how it does.
If you wanted to modify the original software in such a way that it becomes interactive but via protocols which don't provide a means to send arbitrary notes, this license would prevent you from being able to legally do so. If you wanted to incorporate small pieces of it (say, an included library) into a new project which employs protocols which don't provide a means to send arbitrary notes, this license would prevent that too. It stifles innovation in ways the earlier GPL versions did not. I'm not a GPL apologist to begin with (as I already find it too restrictive of end-user/distributor freedom for works I write), but I have a hard time seeing how AGPL works can pass the dissident test, at a minimum. The original GPL only requires you to distribute source for applications which you are already distributing modified binaries. The AGPL adds on a requirement to begin distributing source for modified applications to which you allow connections over the network in any way, even if you aren't distributing the software itself. -- { IRL(Jeremy_Stanley); PGP(9E8DFF2E4F5995F8FEADDC5829ABF7441FB84657); SMTP(fu...@yuggoth.org); IRC(fu...@irc.yuggoth.org#ccl); ICQ(114362511); AIM(dreadazathoth); YAHOO(crawlingchaoslabs); FINGER(fu...@yuggoth.org); MUD(fu...@katarsis.mudpy.org:6669); WWW(http://fungi.yuggoth.org/); } -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-devel-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org