Scripsit Brian T. Sniffen > Henning Makholm <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > Scripsit Walter Landry <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> >> That's good, but only if you're able to modify the Base Format. It is > >> easy to imagine scenarios where you are able to modify individual > >> files, but not the validation mechanism. > > Could you please imagine one? > Sure: I take the Base Format and make a functional change to it, > removing the option to turn off validation. Now I distribute this > under your draft LPPL. But does that possibility make the original software non-free? Your argument seems to be that it is possible to make a derived version that is not free - but that possiblity exists for, say, the BSD license as well. > The freeness of a license should be as divorced as possible from > accidents of implementation. Remember that our actual business on debian-legal is not to decide whether *licenses* are free, but whether actual pieces of *software* are free. As I said, I agree that it is possible to apply the LPPL draft in such a way that it results in non-freedom. However, I also believe that it is possible to apply it in a free way. The situation is not basically that much different from that of the GFDL. You and I can easily agree that it would be better, all other things being equal, to have licenses that could only be applied in ways that make the software they apply to free. However, it seems to be prohibitively complicated to word such a license such that it stays within the intersection of "what the LaTeX people can live with" and "what is DFSG-free (at least according to my and Jeff's gut feelings)". -- Henning Makholm "He who joyfully eats soup has already earned my contempt. He has been given teeth by mistake, since for him the intestines would fully suffice."