=== CUT HERE === Part 1. DFSG-freeness of the GNU Free Documentation License 1.2
Please mark with an "X" the item that most closely approximates your opinion. Mark only one. [ ] The GNU Free Documentation License, version 1.2, as published by the Free Software Foundation, is not a license compatible with the Debian Free Software Guidelines. Works under this license would require significant additional permission statements from the copyright holder(s) for a work under this license to be considered Free Software and thus eligible for inclusion in the Debian OS. [ ] The GNU Free Documentation License, version 1.2, as published by the Free Software Foundation, is a license compatible with the Debian Free Software Guidelines. In general, works under this license would require no additional permission statements from the copyright holder(s) for a work under this license to be considered Free Software and thus eligible for inclusion in the Debian OS. [ ] The GNU Free Documentation License, version 1.2, as published by the Free Software Foundation, can be a license compatible with the Debian Free Software Guidelines, but only if certain restrictions stated in the license are not exercised by the copyright holder with respect to a given work. Works under this license will have to be scrutinized on a case-by-case basis for us to determine whether the work can be be considered Free Software and thus eligible for inclusion in the Debian OS. [ X ] None of the above statements approximates my opinion. Part 2. Status of Respondent Please mark with an "X" the following item only if it is true. [ ] I am a Debian Developer as described in the Debian Constitution as of the date on this survey. === CUT HERE === Comment: documentation is not software, and DFSG is made with software in mind. Though, the DFSG rules can not easily applied to documentation ("if you have only a hammer, everything looks like a nail" is IMHO not particulare usefull to solving problems). The conclusion is that we need rules for documentation. ("Debian Free Documentation Guidelines") Having said this, we must now try to work without the special rules as good as possible, unless someone proposes these rules in time for sarge (i.e. now). So, as a ad-hoc statement it seems to me that the only way "in the spirit" of the Social Contract is to accept GFDL-docu if certain restrictions are not used (except for a license text, which we always did accept as invariant and which is invariant by law). However, don't expect me to back this up. There is nothing which can IMHO be used as basis, because the DFSG cannot really apply (see above). And opinion is not a good basis for a discussion. Cheers, Andi -- http://home.arcor.de/andreas-barth/ PGP 1024/89FB5CE5 DC F1 85 6D A6 45 9C 0F 3B BE F1 D0 C5 D1 D9 0C