* Jonathan Nieder <jrnie...@gmail.com> [110715 22:18]: > For the former (license upgrades), the Debian maintainer should also > patch the source files to make the change, right? If that's done, > then I agree that it seems reasonable. > > For the latter (license explanation), I also agree it's reasonable. > "A verbatim copy" has always been a somewhat problematic phrase > because in practice it's not the words that matter but the meaning. > When describing the license of binaries, of course it is more valuable > to document the actual license the user has than the separate licenses > of the components used to build it.
I think the "verbatim" is extremly important. Meaning is always a matter of interpretation and no maintainer can claim to have a perfect understanding. Misunderstanding and changing something out of a wrong understanding is very similar to willfully misinterpreting the author's wishes and permissions. Similar enough that in the end a judge has to decide what it was. You should never change what is in source files. If you think it is important you can amend it. (Like: "Due to licenses in other files, your only option here is <this and that option/license/whatever>" or "The README also grants the following rights: ..." or so on). Also the debian/copyright should always contain the verbatim grant of the license. If that points to additional material, it might not be necessary to include ineffective/unused parts this points to, but at least the license grant itself should be there as verbatimly as possible[1]. If anything is unclear, make it clear and give the additional information, but do not make it look like it is what the author wrote, unless it is what the author wrote. > debian/copyright describes the license users get, while "egrep -R -e > (opyright|icense|ublic)" in the source package gives the upstream > granted license. So I think we're doing fine on that front. :) We are no legal entity that can protect our users against any claims, our users face the problems if there are any, so they should be able to make an informed decision from looking at debian/copyright. And not be mislead to think everything is fine just because we thought it is and thought it would be a clever idea to hide any discrepancies away. Bernhard R. Link [1] Exceptions are usually removal of indendation/comment characters/ line splitting, deduplication and things like that. Even for the common (and for readability quite important) consolidation of copyright statements with different years I'd not be suprised if there are same lawyers out there advising against ist. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-policy-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20110716112447.gb7...@pcpool00.mathematik.uni-freiburg.de