>>>>> "Russ" == Russ Allbery <r...@debian.org> writes:
Russ> Marc Haber <mh+debian-b...@zugschlus.de> writes: Russ> The years are an annoying bit of pedantry. The short version Russ> is that US copyright law requires a year in the notice, and Russ> that year is supposed to represent a year in which a Russ> copyrightable change was "published." The FSF a long time Russ> back got legal counsel here and published guidance in the GNU Russ> Maintainer Guidelines, and since I've never wanted to Russ> reproduce that work, I tend to just follow them. They say: The years matter because at least under US law, the most recent year in which a change happened affects how long copyright potentially lasts. fsf> Don’t delete old year numbers, though; they are fsf> significant since they indicate when older versions might fsf> theoretically go into the public domain, if the movie fsf> companies don’t continue buying laws to further extend fsf> copyright. If you copy a file into the package from some other fsf> program, keep the copyright years that come with the file. I appreciate that the FSF cares about old years and things going into public domain. I think that we should value being able to coalesce years more than we value that pedantry. I think the FSF has adequately explained the legal rationale for their view, I think their legal reasoning is sound (so we can rely on it), and I think it doesn't apply to our needs (so we can do something else). I don't think we should go so far as to only list the most recent year, but I do think we should collapse things down to a range in debian/copyright. I always assumed from the current wording we could do so and it's a significant surprise to me that you are arguing we cannot. Obviously we should leave the notices in source files alone.
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