Brian Thomas Sniffen writes: > Michael Poole <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > > Brian Thomas Sniffen writes: > > > >> * 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")? > > Nothing. And I'm happy to grant permissive licenses to INRIA/Cristal, > Best Practical, or others who not only distribute their software, but > manage free software projects which incorporate change from the > community. > > But the requirement that I *must* license under those terms is a > non-Free requirement.
I do not like that kind of asymmetric license, but I do not like patch-only or must-rename licenses, and Debian accepts those as Free. I have not yet seen clear reasoning that shows how the DFSG would reject an asymmetric license as non-free. I asked above how an asymmetric license violates DFSG 3, and I see no answer to that question in your email. Michael Poole