On [03/12/02 10:52], Steve Langasek wrote: > On Tue, Dec 03, 2002 at 08:56:57AM +0100, Christian Kurz wrote: > > > Although technically not a license, I believe the above statement is > > > sufficient to place the code in question in the public domain. This > > > means that there is no longer a copyright on the software at all > > > (copyright has been waived), and therefore no license is necessary. > > > Public-domain software is DFSG-free.
> > Oh, so what would need to be changed to make this text a license itself? > > The upstream author wouldn't mind changing the current license text if > > someone finds more appropriate words or discoveres > > mistakes/problems/etc. His main concern is that the code should be > > public domain and it's license shouldn't be more restrictive compared > > to the 'license' (or lack of it) for DJB's cdb. So if you or someone > > else has suggestion for change, please tell me and I'll get in touch > > with the upstream author to change the license. > If a license is what is desired, then the text should explicitly grant us > all the rights that we require under the DFSG. The BSD license is > probably the simplest form of this. But again, public-domain software is > DFSG-free: if software is in the public domain, there is no copyright > holder who can withhold any rights from us. Well, in the first version, the package was simply having the following copyright information: |tinycdb shares no code with the above two packages, it was |written from scratch by Michael Tokarev, who placed all the |code to public domain. And the files in the source code all contained this text. | * This file is a part of tinycdb package by Michael Tokarev, [EMAIL PROTECTED] | * Public domain. So lintian complained about no license being available and I asked him to provide a copyright file. He told me then that he doesn't care about the license at all and wants to simply share the code. I suggested then using something like the PARTY-WARE or BEER-WARE license (as named on debian-devel). Then he came up with the license text that I cited in the start of this discussion. Since I wasn't sure if the text would qualify as DSFG-free and be acceptable, I suggest to contact debian-legal to figure this out. So Michael (and neither I ;-) wouldn't mind changing the current license text to something else to keep the code in public domain. So would having a copyright file saying the code is public domain be enough? Christian -- Debian Developer (http://www.debian.org) 1024D/B7CEC7E8 44BD 1F9E A997 3BE2 A44F 96A4 1C98 EEF3 B7CE C7E8
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