[I hope Mr. Lea doesn't mind the CC.] On Mon, Sep 30, 2002 at 10:57:47PM -0400, Steven Barker wrote: [snip] > I wrote Prof. Lea and asked if he has permission to distribute these > classes, and how this permission might apply to Debian. He sent me > the text of a license he has signed with Sun: > > Copyright (c) 1994-2001 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights > > reserved. Sun hereby grants Doug Lea a non-exclusive, worldwide, > > non-transferrable license to use and distribute the Java Software > > technologies as a part of a larger work in source and binary forms, > > with or without modification, provided that the following conditions > > are met: [snip]
> I'm a bit concerned about the word "non-transferable" and the fact > that the license may grant permission to modify and/or distribute > to Doug Lea but not to third parties like Debian or even me as an > individual. Your analysis is correct. Unfortunately, this means that the license fails DFSG 7 ("Distribution of License"). A shame, because it otherwise looked DSFG-free (pretty much the BSD license, though that bit about affirming non-usage in nuclear facilities gave me a little pause). > Do I need to get further clairification from Sun about this? Yes. > The package will already be going into contrib because several of the > classes depending on the Java2 Container API. I just don't want it > to be relegated to non-free (I'll remove the offending files before > doing that). Unfortunately, unless you can get Sun to extend a transferrable license, you'll either have to remove the files or move the package to non-free. > Anyway, thanks in advance for your advice! Sorry to be the bearer of bad news. -- G. Branden Robinson | You could wire up a dead rat to a Debian GNU/Linux | DIMM socket and the PC BIOS memory [EMAIL PROTECTED] | test would pass it just fine. http://people.debian.org/~branden/ | -- Ethan Benson
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