This reply consists only of non-topical editorial comments. Anthony Towns wrote: > In November 2002, version 1.2 of the GNU Free Documentation License (GNU > FDL) was released by the Free Software Foundation after a long period > of consultation. Unfortunately, some concerns raised by members of the > Debian Project were not addressed, and as such the GNU FDL can apply > to works that do not pass the Debian Free Software Guidelines (DFSG), > and may thus only be included in the non-free component of the Debian > archive, not the Debian distribution itself.
Maybe just because I had a headache at the time, but the first time I read that sentence I thought you were saying the FDL license itself could only go in non-free. You could eliminate any ambiguity by breaking the last sentence into two. > The GNU FDL includes a number of conditions, which apply to all modified > versions, that disallow modifications. In particular, these are: Maybe say "modified versions of a work". Also, it's at first confusing to see the "modifid versions" .. "disallow modifications", maybe s/disallow modifications/disallow certian modifications/ > This is a very fundamental question. Debian's decision is based > on some fundamental premises: we are, at our heart, an operating > system distribution, so we're interested in making a good operating > system that you can do a lot with far more than distributing every "lot with far more" is hard to parse, suggest punctuation or something. > What About Unmodifiable Software Licenses Like the GNU GPL? > > Many software licenses unfortunately disallow the creation ofderivative ^^ space > works. The FSF give everyone permission to distribute verbatim gives > copies of the GPL, eg, but do not give you permission to take the does (unless FSF has a different number than I think it has) > It's easy to misapply the GNU FDL. > > The GNU FDL says that only "Secondary Sections" (a term it defines) > may be marked Invariant, but does not say what should happen if a > section that is not Secondary is listed as an Invariant Section. > The FSF itself has made this mistake several times[1], so we know > it's an easy mistake to make. Your footnote [1] seems to be dangling. > Given the GNU Projects influence on Debian, shouldn't the GNU Manifesto 's > Why does this document use various Capitalisation Styles? > > Because you haven't edited it yet. Ok, fine so I think you should re-case the words in the questions of the FAQ, as follows: What does it mean that this document is a draft? It's the Debian Free _Software_ Guidelines, stupid -- why apply them to documentation? What about unmodifiable software licenses like the GNU GPL? Beyond allowing Invariant Sections, why does the GNU FDL suck? Why are unmodifiable sections a problem? Given the GNU project's influence on Debian, shouldn't the GNU Manifesto be included in the Debian GNU/Linux distribution anyway? Why does this document use various capitalisation styles? There are also a few "invariant sections" here and there that should be changed to "Invariant Sections". -- see shy jo
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