The upcoming Creative Commons 3.0 license suite is being tailored specifically to be compatible with the DFSG and make works licensed under the Attribution or Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 licenses acceptable for inclusion in Debian.
One of the major criticisms of Creative Commons has been that they don't distinguish between free licenses (or licenses at least intended for use on free software) and those that aren't even compatible with free software in intention. I've made the suggestion in an essay on my personal Web site that if debian-legal and the ftpmasters decide that works licensed under the 3.0 licenses are acceptable for inclusion in Debian, that CC should note that fact on the license deeds and on their license chooser: http://evan.prodromou.name/CC_Licence_Distinctions My question is: at what point would it be acceptable for a third-party organization to state that a license is "DFSG-compatible"? At what point would it be acceptable to use the Debian trademarks (name and/or open use logo) to underline that fact? Our review process for licenses in the past has been casual and non-authoritative at best (with the notable exception of our recent GR on the GFDL). I don't think we want to get into the OSI's business of approving licenses. But I think there's some value for people deciding on a license in knowing which licenses clearly prevent a work from being included in Debian and which do not. So: if there's a public statement by Debian or debian-legal on a license (like http://people.debian.org/~evan/ccsummary is now), would it be misleading for an organization to point to that statement? Especially if it was clear that the review and approval was not an endorsement of the organization or their goals? Thanks, ~Evan -- Evan Prodromou <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> The Debian Project (http://www.debian.org/)
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