The Debian Project is not a legal entity so you can't assign copyright to it. See the replies about SPI/FSF/etc though.
If you are contributing to copyleft projects, it is important to have diverse copyright holders to prevent converting projects to proprietary licenses. The package you are contributing to is permissively licensed and can become proprietary easily anyway, so this doesn't apply to your situation though. My advice would just to put "Copyright 2013 Thomas Koch" and a DFSG-free license, anything else would be more effort on your part. If you don't want to be a copyright holder ever, your choices are to stop creating copyrightable materials or time travel to before 1886 and take it up with the Berne Convention authors. There is also work-for-hire situations in various jurisdictions and tedious copyright assignment procedures in many others. -- bye, pabs http://wiki.debian.org/PaulWise -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-project-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/caktje6fooagr6pfo4o4-ad+_u-ab4jvivzdtfcipkxmuyob...@mail.gmail.com