Richard Braakman wrote: > On Tue, Jul 23, 2002 at 09:39:08AM +0200, Martin Schulze wrote: > > > Mentioning option 3 at all seems misleading, IMHO. No one burning CDs > > > from our archive receives such an offer, so it should be made clear that > > > even non-profits cannot exercise this option. > > > > Err... They have received the binary code *and* the source, but > > decided to ignore the source. Debian distributes both source and > > binary on their archive, for both individual packages and cd images. > > Yes, so Debian is using 3(a), not 3(b).
Indeed, I'd consider Debian uses (1) [1], since we're distributing source and binary at the same time, through the Internet. > Therefore no-one who redistributes > directly from our archive can use 3(c). That's my interpretation as well. As a result, even non-profit entities need to provide the source as in (2) [3(b) in your numbering, I guess], that is, use a written offer and provide the source for three years at least. This is important for all Debian people who are burning CD's for exhibitions etc. > (They key is that we provide only > "current" sources, not sources from up to 3 years ago.) Well, not exactly, it's a bit more complicated (as usual...). We provide the most recent source for the particular distribution, i.e. this includes old versions of software in older distributions (think slink/potato/bo/etc.) but maybe not the version which was burned on an r0 CD. > A second-stage distributor could use option 3 when redistributing something > from a first-stage distributor, but is that really the audience of your > text? Such a second stage is probably not going to be a "vendor", but > someone giving a CD to a friend. Per definition: sure, it is. The audience is "anybody who distributes Debian on CD or via CD images". The goal is to present all entities that distribute Debian a guideline or a policy that lists their requirements to fulfil the license terms properly. I don't want to harm anybody, it's even the other way around, I'd like to preserve them from being harmed by software authors who see their license violated. Regards, Joey [1] http://www.debian.org/CD/vendors/legal -- The good thing about standards is that there are so many to choose from. -- Andrew S. Tanenbaum Please always Cc to me when replying to me on the lists. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]