Scripsit Brian Thomas Sniffen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Henning Makholm <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > There is nothing in the phrase "a Debian-specific" licence that > > implies that anything has been signed by Debian (whatever that means). > Um. While true, that has the wrong causality. > That Debian has a license only because it has somehow signed something > *does* imply that it's a Debian-specific license. Perhaps we're talking at cross-purposes. I was reacting to what I thought was a general statement that Debian-specific licenses are not good enough for non-free. If you are just saying that the particular license that started the thread is not good enough for non-free, I completely agree. But I don't think that has much to do with its being "specific to Debian". > > An unilateral declaration saying "I hereby allow my program Foomatic > > to be distributed in source and binary from by all Debian mirrors" is > > a Debian-specific license. > That would make me very nervous, as a mirror operator. But OK. I think mirror operators *should* be nervous if they mirror non-free in any other context than a full mirror of the Debian archive. Historically, the scrutiny we have applied to non-free licenses has not included not thought about that situation, so partial mirror operators are essentially on their own with respect to non-free. -- Henning Makholm "However, the fact that the utterance by Epimenides of that false sentence could imply the existence of some Cretan who is not a liar is rather unsettling."