On Thu, Jun 20, 2002 at 10:22:26AM -0400, Michael Stutz wrote: > The DSL is a license that already exists for this purpose: > http://dsl.org/copyleft/dsl.txt > > It is a copyleft license that can be used for any kind of work, as > recognized by copyright law. In particular, it has been used for > published books.
I'll take a closer look at it, but at first glance I don't like this: 6. ACCEPTANCE. Copying, distributing or modifying the Work (including but not limited to sampling from the Work in a new work) indicates acceptance of these terms. The only thing that can indicate my acceptance of a contractual agreement is my signature. You might as well say, "Going to bed at 10PM indicates acceptance of these terms." You do not have the right under copyright law to unilaterally dictate the terms of my acceptance of your license. More to the point, I can copy, distribute, or modify the Work under certain conditions due to Fair Use exceptions to copyright irrespective of your assertions to the contrary. Thanks for pointing it out, though. I had heard of the DSL but had not yet researched it. Also, by the way, you quote fairly liberally from the GNU GPL. I wonder if *your* actions fall under a Fair Use exception...(or did you negotiate with the FSF and receive permission to create a derivative work of the GNU GPL?) -- G. Branden Robinson | Debian GNU/Linux | Please do not look directly into [EMAIL PROTECTED] | laser with remaining eye. http://people.debian.org/~branden/ |
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