Hi, since this issue becomes complex I'd like to bring up it at debian-legal list for advise.
Kind regards Andreas. On Mon, Aug 30, 2021 at 08:08:26AM +0200, Ole Tange wrote: > Ian Turner <vec...@vectro.org> wrote: > > On 8/28/21 7:41 AM, Andreas Tille wrote: > >>I updated the patch in Git[1] but did not yet activate it yet. I'm fine > >>with uploading parallel with the patch activated if you really think we > >>should disrespect the wish of the author and insist on plain GPL text. > > > > My reading of bug 905674 is that the citation notice has been previously > > judged to be incompatible with the DFSG and that's why it was removed. > > Also ultimately Debian developers will have to make their own decision, > > though if you are asking my personal opinion, I think it would be best to > > remove it. > > The only license that gives you the right to change the source code is GPLv3. > > #905674 and #915541 refer to the wording of version 20141022. The > current wording (20210722) has been cleared by Richard M. Stallman to > be compatible with GPLv3. This is because the citation notice is not > part of the license, but part of academic tradition (this was not > clear in version 20141022). > > DFSG mentions "The license must not restrict anyone from making use of > the program in a specific field of endeavor", and since the academic > tradition is not part of the license and since the tradition does not > "restrict anyone from making use of the program in a specific field of > endeavor", it is hard to see, how you would argue the wording of > version 20210722 does not adhere to DFSG (the wording in 20141022 was > different, and it is this old wording that is the background for > #905674 and referred in > https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=915541#5). > > If your stance is based on reading #905674 I will encourage you to > read the current wording, and argue how the current wording does not > adhere to DFSG. > > If you disagree with Richard M. Stallman's interpretation of GPLv3 and > feel the citation notice does not adhere to GPLv3, you should treat > the software as if it is not available under GPLv3. And since GPLv3 is > the only thing that would give you the right to change it, you would > not be allowed to change the software. > > In other words: If you want to remove the citation notice to make the > software compliant with your interpretation of GPLv3, you first have > to accept that the software is already compliant with GPLv3, because > nothing else gives you the right to change it. And if you accept this, > you do not need to change it to make it compliant. > > > Citations are what indirectly fund maintaining GNU Parallel (for > details see: > https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/parallel.git/tree/doc/citation-notice-faq.txt). > Before the citation notice was implemented hardly anyone cited GNU > Parallel, and that would not have been sustainable in the long term. > > Therefore it is more important to keep the notice than to be included > in different distributions. Specifically, it will be preferable to be > moved from Debian main to Debian non-free over having the notice > removed (and staying in main). > > In other words: It is preferable having fewer users, who all know they > should cite, over having many users, who do not know they should cite. > > This is because long-term survival with funding is more important than > short-term gains in popularity that can be achieved by being > distributed as part of a distribution. > > If the goal had been to get more users, then the license would have > been public domain. > > > By removing the citation notice you are knowingly making it harder for > me to justify spending time on developing GNU Parallel, and sending a > signal to future developers that Debian does not care about their long > term survival - only short term benefits to the project. I hope we can > agree we want more free software in the future - not less. > > > I am among those not persuaded by Ole's arguments to the > > contrary, in the specific context of the Debian project. > > If the revised wording (from version 20141022 to version 20210722) > does not change your opinion, I feel the only compromise that is > acceptable to all the active parties is to keep the citation notice > even if this means moving the software from main to non-free. > > > /Ole > -- http://fam-tille.de