Carlos Laviola writes: > Dear -legal friends, > > The FIGlet people are considering changing the license of the entire > distribution from Artistic to the AFL 2.1. I've found some bits of the > license rather strange -- too many talk about patents and > jurisdictions -- but it might just be me. > > Here's Robert Millan's ("nyu") take on it: > > <nyu> section 5 is fun > <nyu> no explicit permission to distribute for a fee > <nyu> section 9 might violate the dissident test > <nyu> section 10 and 11 sound really weird. i can't give advice on > these (IANAL) > <nyu> claviola: I suggest you contact debian-legal (the mailing list) > for an in-depth analisys
Section 5 is omitted from the AFL to keep the numbers the same as in the Open Software License (by the same author, and generally parallel clauses, except for the AFL's omission of 5 and parts of section 1). Clauses like 9 have been a DFSG problem in the past; AFL 2.1 seems to remove the worst problems (like requiring the click of an Accept button), but is still vague enough for a lawyer to make a lot of money arguing over its real meaning as it applies to people like Debian mirror operators. A lot of people think termination on patent action as in section 10 is DFSG-free, but some disagree. I am not sure debian-legal has a strong consensus on it. (Note that some packages in main use the IBM Public License, which is broader than this.) A lot of people think choice of venue as in section 11 is non-free, but some disagree. I am not sure debian-legal has a strong consensus on it. (Again, the IBM Public License has a similar clause.) Michael Poole