Scripsit Lewis Jardine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Maybe an explicit statement of this point would be a useful addition, > possibly in the introduction?
I think you're right in general, but I'm not happy with your exact text: > Note that the /license/ is the terms of the /license text/ as > interpreted by the author, _not_ the terms of the /license text/ as > interpreted by any third-party. Any /license text/, even if free > when interpreted in the most common manner, may be interpreted by > the author in such a way as to make the /license/ non-free. " I think it would be bad idea to entrench the "the author is always right" rule of thumb in the DFSG itself. We *usually* respect the author's wishes, but in a tentacles-of-evil situation we may need to explicitly disagree with a strange license-text interpretation that the author acquires *after* the Debian system has become dependent on his work. Instead, I have written: If the author has granted rights by stating that a specific <b>license text</b> applies to the work, the word <b>license</b> refers to the <em>meaning</em> of the license text in the specific context of the particular work. <i>Thus, even if the same license <em>text</em> applies to two different works, one work can be free and the other non-free, because of differences in the way the authors apply a generic license text, or because the meaning of the licence text explicitly depends on inherent properties of the licensed work.</i> -- Henning Makholm "*Tak* for de ord. *Nu* vinker nobelprisen forude."