[People replying on -legal. Please CC me as I'm not subscribed to the list.]
This is the CPYRIGHT file from pine 4.43 my comments are in []. I've read some of the earlier discussion about the pine license but I think some of the concerns raised there are no longer relevant. (though there may be new ones.] I maintain the license as it stands now should qualify a binary package of pine/pico etc. for inclusion in main or at the very least non-free. Pine and Pico are registered trademarks of the University of Washington. No commercial use of these trademarks may be made without prior written permission of the University of Washington. Pine, Pico, and Pilot software and its included text are Copyright 1989-2001 by the University of Washington. [Ok this seems like boilerplate stuff.] Use of Pine/Pico/Pilot: You may compile and execute these programs for any purpose, including commercial, without paying anything to the University of Washington, provided that the legal notices are maintained intact and honored. [Again nothing controversial here] Local modification of this release is permitted as follows, or by mutual agreement: In order to reduce confusion and facilitate debugging, we request that locally modified versions be denoted by appending the letter "L" to the current version number, and that the local changes be enumerated in the integral release notes and associated documentation. [To meet these requirements it should be sufficient to call a hypothetical Debian package 4.43L and add the line "See /usr/share/doc/pine/changelog.Debian.gz for local changes" to pines' README.] Redistribution of this release is permitted as follows, or by mutual agreement: (a) In free-of-charge or at-cost distributions by non-profit concerns; (b) In free-of-charge distributions by for-profit concerns; (c) Inclusion in a CD-ROM collection of free-of-charge, shareware, or non-proprietary software for which a fee may be charged for the packaged distribution. [I guess this is the sticking point? But I really don't see how these points violate the DFSG. The only scenario that comes to mind is if a commercial vendor had a for-pay FTP site but that's kind of far-fetched. And even then it could go into non-free. The earlier threads on -legal mentioned DFSG #8 but this text does not state that further redistribution is not allowed.] Redistribution of binary versions is further constrained by license agreements for incorporated libraries from third parties, e.g. LDAP, GSSAPI. [Tell us something we don't know.] The University of Washington encourages unrestricted distribution of individual patches to the Pine system. By "patches" we mean "difference" files that can be applied to the University of Washington Pine source distribution in order to accomplish bug fixes, minor enhancements, or adaptation to new operating systems. Submission of these patches to University of Washington for possible inclusion in future Pine versions is also encouraged. [This doesn't say that modifications must be made as patches only. Just that patches are "encouraged."] The above permissions are hereby granted, provided that the Pine and Pico copyright and trademark notices appear in all copies and that both the above copyright notice and this permission notice appear in supporting documentation, and that the name of the University of Washington not be used in advertising or publicity pertaining to distribution of the software without specific, prior written permission. This software is made available "as is", and THE UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE, INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, AND IN NO EVENT SHALL THE UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE) OR STRICT LIABILITY, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. [More boiler plate.] So what do you think? -- Jaldhar H. Vyas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> It's a girl! See the pictures - http://www.braincells.com/shailaja/