On 2/4/25 17:41, Sam Hartman wrote:
"Simon" == Simon Josefsson <si...@josefsson.org> writes:
Simon> All, Is the license below acceptable for inclusion into
Simon> 'non-free'? It is claimed to cover the tarsnap software, see
Simon> https://github.com/Tarsnap/tarsnap and
Simon> https://www.tarsnap.com/ for background.
I think Andrew's reading is more picky than I've generally seen us be.
I think that if you do not need to modify any of the files they
distribute in order to package, you can make a sufficiently credible
claim that you have not modified the software.
The question in my mind is whether you are redistributing for the sole
purpose of using their backup service.
I'm not worried about the case where a user does something different:
users are expected to read and comply with the licenses of non-free
software they install.
Debian has no plans to use their backup service. Instead, we're
redistributing in order to make it easier for others to do so.
I don't know whether that's the same as redistributing to use their
backup service.
I'd go ask them.
As far as I'm concerned (as the owner of Tarsnap Backup Inc. and the author
of the license): "For the purpose of using the tarsnap backup service" doesn't
say anything about who is using the backup service. And the tarsnap client is
packaged up for lots of other operating systems (e.g. in the FreeBSD ports
tree). Tarsnap is obviously not Free in the Debian sense but I don't see any
reason why it shouldn't be in the non-free repo.
As Graham noted upthread, we do host our own .deb package repo -- but we only
have x86 packages, so it would make me very happy to see tarsnap be included
in Debian and built for other platforms as well.
--
Colin Percival
FreeBSD Release Engineering Lead & EC2 platform maintainer
Founder, Tarsnap | www.tarsnap.com | Online backups for the truly paranoid