Jacobo Tarrio writes: > O Xoves, 12 de Agosto de 2004 ás 11:29:50 -0400, Michael Poole escribía: > > > > * Licenses like the QPL, which compel me to give somebody more rights > > > to my work than I had to his, are not Free. They are not compatible > > > with DFSG 3. > > This is where you lose me. How is that incompatible with DFSG 3? If > > the license says that Entity X gets extra rights (perhaps being the > > author of the original software), what prevents Author Y from > > releasing modifications under the same license terms ("Entity X gets > > extra rights to modifications")? > > You're talking about a license as "a document with license terms written on > it". He's talking about a license as "a set of permissions the copyright > holder grants".
If the DFSG is intended to talk about permission grants, perhaps it should be revised to do so, instead of talking about licence terms. DFSG#7 would be nonsensical with that meaning. > With this meaning, DFSG#3 would ask that anyone who distributes a modified > work be able to give the recipient the exact same permissions she received > from the copyright holder. If she gives a modified QPLed work to me, for > instance, the permissions are the same, but if she distributes a copy to the > original copyright holder, she would be forced to give him permissions she > didn't originally receive. That is such a strained interpretation that I cannot take it seriously. Even with that meaning, though, the DFSG does not say that the original license can be the only acceptable license. Michael Poole