On Fri, Jan 08, 1999 at 02:08:55AM +0100, Henning Makholm wrote: > [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: > > Henning Makholm writes: > > | ii - making an honest attempt at communicating your > > | modifications to [us], e.g., by sending them by > > | email [...] You may distribute your modified > > | version even if you have not got a response yet, > > | or even if you have been forced to give up trying > > | to contact us. But you have to at least have *tried*. > > No. > I.e, in addition to letting people fork our project (which I realize > could be necessary e.g. when our grant expires if we can not fund > further development man-hours), we must let them fork our project > and keep that a secret from us. > > Why on earth?
Because not every modification is a fork in progress -- if someone uploads a new Debian package changing a manpage to use "their" instead of "there", you have to be notified. This is inconvenient for both us and (when your software becomes incredibly popular) you. Because "honest attempt" is a little bit... vague. Is yelling out across the street "Hey, are the authors of FooBar about!?" an honest attempt at getting in contact with you? What happens if your policy on email changes, and you start only accepting email that has an ecash postage stamp (to filter out spam), and ordinary email just gets dumped -- just think, you could ramp up the ecash fee to $20 or something and effectively get paid for other people modifying your program. Basically we don't like clauses that inflict a "fee" on redistribution, whether it be monetary, or postcardware like the above. (Having something that says "If you make significant modifications, please contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] so that the changes can be considered for the next official release" or something similar in the license -- "you might like to" instead of "you must" is quite acceptable, btw, and probably close to as useful) I'd have thought a better bet for this would be to ensure that if they *do* fork your project, when you find out about it (they start hitting the popular press), they should be obligated to let you use their modifications, just as you let them use your original. The GPL's good at this (for purely free projects), and the (as yet unfinished) QPL or MPL (for projects with both free and commercial aims) seem to be too. HTH. Cheers, aj -- Anthony Towns <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <http://azure.humbug.org.au/~aj/> I don't speak for anyone save myself. PGP encrypted mail preferred. ``Like the ski resort of girls looking for husbands and husbands looking for girls, the situation is not as symmetrical as it might seem.''
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