Hello all, The program LGrind has a licensing issue which has troubled me a lot. On the one hand, the source code bears a complete BSD licence (all four paragraphs). This probably comes from vgrind, an old UNIX tool.
Further down one of the many authors, Van Jacobson, writes the following: "This program may be freely used and copied but may not be sold without the author's written permission. This notice must remain in any copy or derivative." The typical case of someone accidentally making a program non-free. Now, the author gives the following means for contacting him: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (from arpanet, milnet, csnet, etc.) ..!ucbvax!lbl-csam!van (from Usenet/UUCP) Well, those addresses don't exist anymore AFAIK. I tried to find the man and used a more recent email address ([EMAIL PROTECTED]). Finally I found he moved to Cisco Systems and tried to use an address there. No answer. None at all, not even bouncing mail. As far as I'm concerned the author does not exist anymore. What to do with such a program? Leave it in non-free forever or rewrite it? Or should I just erase that remark, since I can be pretty sure he doesn't care? Really, if someone can point me at how to contact Van Jacobson, he's quite famous after all, I'd be grateful as well. But what if he is simply unreachable? Is the licence perhaps somehow void in this case? Regards, Mike -- |=| Michael Piefel [EMAIL PROTECTED] |=| Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin http://www.piefel.de/micha