First of all, this is a large mail. Please excuse this. I got the advice to post this question here. Please reply to my email address, as I am not subscribed to this list
As I am new to creating Debian packages, I am not sure if Abacus Portsentry's license allows it to be put in the main (or if it has to go into non-free) section. The program is free to use by anybody and can be distributed in any form, the only problem is that the author prohibits modifications he is not aware of. That sounds non-free to me. Please could somebody check it (at www.psionic.com) ? I have a written statement by the Author that he allows packages (including the needed minor modifications on scripts and Makefiles) to be made and that Portsentry can be included in a distribution if the distribution is not sold because of Portsentry. Please post the full license and the author's statement to [EMAIL PROTECTED] By doing that you'll get everyone who's interested in licensing issues to read through it and comment. ---------------------------------- Here is the full license: $Id: LICENSE,v 1.3 1999/05/01 05:40:40 crowland Exp crowland $ ********************************************************************** THIS SOFTWARE CONTAINS CONCEPTS AND TECHNIQUES THAT ARE PATENT PENDING ********************************************************************** LICENSE ALL SOFTWARE AND PAPERS DISTRIBUTED BY CRAIG H. ROWLAND ("THE AUTHOR") AND PSIONIC SOFTWARE SYSTEMS ARE PROVIDED "AS IS" AND MAKES NO WARRANTY, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, AS TO THE ACCURACY, CAPABILITY, EFFICIENCY, MERCHANTABILITY, OR FUNCTIONING OF THIS SOFTWARE AND DOCUMENTATION. IN NO EVENT WILL THE AUTHOR, AN EMPLOYER OF THE AUTHOR OR PSIONIC SOFTWARE SYSTEMS BE LIABLE FOR ANY GENERAL, CONSEQUENTIAL, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, EXEMPLARY, OR SPECIAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF THE AUTHOR HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES. Some of this software is PATENT PENDING. If you have any questions regarding this license please contact the author. License All software, papers, and other works of information are being licensed for use as laid out in the terms of this agreement and remain the property and copyright of the author except where noted otherwise. These works may not to be used in part or in whole of a commercial product offering without express written consent from the author. Permission is granted to modify source code for personal use only. DISTRIBUTION OF MODIFIED SOURCE CODE WITHOUT THE AUTHOR'S PERMISSION IS PROHIBITED. Distribution All distributed software, papers, and other works are free to use by any individual, organization, or commercial venture as long as the above conditions are agreed to. This software may be included with any freely distributed Operating System provided it is not sold separately or as part of a "security bundle" or similar packaging. Scope This disclaimer supercedes all previous licensing/disclaimers either oral or written. Direct any questions to the author. You accept this software on the condition that you indemnify and hold harmless the Author from any and all liability or damages to third parties, including attorney's fees, court costs, and other related costs and expenses, arising out of your use of this software. ----------------------------------------------- And here the written statement from the autor (it was a reply to some questions I mailed him - anything that does not have to do with the license has been cut out): > I am planning to make > Debian Linux packages of them (Sentry, Logcheck). However, the license was not > clear to me. Do you allow packages to be made, including the minor > modifications on scripts and Makefiles to make them work with Debian ? The point of the license is really to prevent unauthorized modifications to the source that I'm not aware of. Because they are security tools I need to be very careful about what changes are made to them so no holes are introduced. I don't have a problem with packages being made, I'll even put links to them on the web pages. > Also I am building a Linux based firewall (actually, a secured distribution > based on Debian - it will be distributed under the GPL) and I am not sure if > you allow your tools to be included in such a package. <snip> I would allow for this as long as you aren't selling a "Linux security package" or similar bundle that is based solely on my tools. I want to avoid people charging money for my tools (which are free). If you are using them as part of a free distribution I wouldn't have a problem with you using the tools at all. <snip> Thanks, let me know if you have any other questions. You can see I'm not that strict, I just want to avoid unauthorized modifications and people selling the tools directly. Thanks in advance Rene -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Rene Mayrhofer, ViaNova KEG NIC-HDL: RM1677-RIPE Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Snail: Penz 217, A-4441 Behamberg PGP(DSS): E661 2E45 9B7F B239 D422 0A90 A4C2 DA09 F72F 6EC5 PGP(D/H): B77F 51A8 B046 87A6 4D61 2C5D 742F F433 6732 E4DC GPG: D356 69B6 6A08 E033 257B 1872 6AEA 88FB C805 63BD ------------------------------------------------------------------------------