Hi, I've been contacted by Ann Barcomb (see her message below; below that is her second message to me) about the Perl module license issue. I've put her on the Cc and would appreciate it if you could keep her on the list of recepients.
So, what information do we feed back to the Perl community in order for them to "fix" their licenses. Thanks, Ardo ----- Forwarded message from Ann Barcomb <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ----- From: Ann Barcomb <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subject: Re: Perl module licensing and Debian To: Ardo van Rangelrooij <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Date: Wed, 5 Feb 2003 02:32:06 -0800 (PST) Hello, Someone forwarded your mail to the perlxml list to me. I think it is important to get this information out to module authors (for example with a post to use.perl.org), but it is also important to have clear steps authors can take to 'fix' their licenses. Has Debian stated whether it would be acceptable for modules to add which Perl (license) version the module is available under? For example, would the following text (a minute change for the module author) be acceptable? This module is available under the same terms and conditions as Perl itself, versions 5.3 through 6.8. Also, if there is some way for module authors to inform Debian that the change of license has been made this issue can be addressed that much more quickly. I appreciate any information you may be able to add to your original post. Thanks, Ann Barcomb <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ----- End forwarded message ----- ----- Forwarded message from Ann Barcomb <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ----- From: Ann Barcomb <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subject: Re: Perl module licensing and Debian To: Ardo van Rangelrooij <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Date: Wed, 5 Feb 2003 23:03:40 -0800 (PST) Hi, > Thanks for showing your support to get this unfortunate issue resolved. Your post came right on the heels of a heated discussion in Amsterdam.pm over what Perl could do to keep from losing ground to other programming languages ;) Very timely. > Unfortunately, this issue goes to the core of Perl. E.g. perlmodlib(1) > and pod2man(1) explicitly suggest to use the license as it currently > is. Even some of the core Perl modules have this license. This is a > very big fish to fry. Hopefully Debian doesn't get burned too much. Changing the documentation in those places is going to be a lot easier than getting every module author to change her or his documentation, if only for the fact that there are a lot of module authors and even making them all aware of this will be hard. The core documentation, on the other hand, is handled by the Perl documentation project, which is easy to reach via mailing list (which I did yesterday). There was one reply, of the 'wait and see' nature. Information from Debian, rather than speculation would be quite useful at this point. > I'll ask on the debian-legal mailing list what exactly should be stated > for the license to be acceptable for Debian. Thanks. I think most Perl authors will find the entire thing a bit silly, but if it isn't much work to change their licenses, and the process is well-documented, people will probably be willing to do it. I'm a bit disappointed that Debian didn't choose to mention this matter to the Perl community (or did they?) rather than simply not packaging the modules and waiting until someone asked about it. > Someone should probably also contact the "core" Perl people. Are you in > a position to do this gently? If not, what would be the best means to > bring this issue into the Perl community without causing a permanent > rift between both communities? I'm not a member of p5p, although I am on the Perl documentation project. I do know most of the people who ought to be contacted about this sort of thing, and how to contact them. Maybe not the best position, but on the other hand, this project interests me and I'm willing to work on convincing people that Perl should not reduce the number of systems it is on if what it takes to be on a system is fairly trivial. > I'll get back to you. Thanks, Ann ----- End forwarded message ----- -- Ardo van Rangelrooij home email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] home page: http://people.debian.org/~ardo GnuPG fp: 3B 1F 21 72 00 5C 3A 73 7F 72 DF D9 90 78 47 F9