On Thu, Mar 24, 2005 at 07:11:18PM +1100, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Dear Debian BTS gurus, > > A day or so ago, in connection with another bug (#295435), I discovered > the existence and use of [EMAIL PROTECTED] Out of curiosity, I > tried to set the severity of this bug to critical; to my amazement, this > worked; but then Manoj Srivastava set the severity back to wishlist. > > My question: are the public in general and bug submitters in particular, > expected or permitted to use [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Yes, they are. However we expect them to follow the rules. This bug is now assigned to the debian-policy package. One of the rules is that policy proposal are wishlist by definition. See the policy-process document: /usr/share/doc/debian-policy/policy-process.txt.gz 3.1. Initiating discussions ... Once the proposer is satisfied that the proposal has merit (with or without trying the waters on the list), the proposer should file a _wishlist_ bug against the debian-policy package. This stage can be initiated by any member of the list. Definition of severity can be found here: /usr/share/doc/debian/bug-maint-info.txt critical makes unrelated software on the system (or the whole system) break, or causes serious data loss, or introduces a security hole on systems where you install the package. In no way installing the debian-policy package introduce a security hole, causes serious data loss or makes unrelated software on the system break. Cheers, -- Bill. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Imagine a large red swirl here. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]