On 2003-10-23, MJ Ray <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Please add your clarifications to your licence text. Assertions here > may not be taken into consideration. I'm not sure what current opinion > is about legal validity of unsigned emails to a public list.
Hmm? debian-legal has frequently accepted unsigned e-mails as clarifications of license texts. I also don't think the original license was at all ambiguous in the clause 3 vs. clause 4 issue: such a license is a grant of permission, and if I grant you permission to do X if Y, and also grant permission to do X if Z, then if you do either Y or Z, then you can do X. If one wanted to tie the two clauses together, then you'd have to add some explicit language linking the two clauses. For instance, take the GPL: Clause 1 grants permission to distribute verbatim copies, which is obviously not free enough for Debian; it's only Clause 3 that grants you permission to distribute modified copies. The situation seems analogous. I think the license is obnoxious and not to be encouraged [perhaps by keeping it out of Debian], but I don't yet see any reason it's not DFSG-free. Peace, Dylan