Hi--

On Sep 16, 2010, at 11:44 AM, Dmitry Marakasov wrote:
> The only thing left that worries me is that US export laws stuff - I
> absolutely don't understand what that means and how we can/cannot
> violate these by mirroring distfiles/packages. For now I've removed all
> mirroring permissions from LICENSE_PERMS for EULA, so this should be
> safe. However, I'd really like that stuff explained by someone so
> mirroring could maybe be reenabled.
> 
> Is I understand, to comply with license, we need to prohibit
> distribution of software into "(or to a national or resident of)
> any country to which the United States has embargoed goods", which
> we likely won't do thus we should not mirror the files.

It generally isn't useful to include specific legal geographical restrictions 
into the terms of a license which is used world-wide.  US citizens/residents 
already are obligated to obey US law, just as people elsewhere are obligated to 
follow their own local laws; a software license doesn't need to mention them 
any more than it needs to include the Magnuson-Moss  Warranty Act or the US 
FTC's policies and statutes on "unfair or deceptive acts or practices".

Both the OSI and the FSF/GNU folks recommend against including references to US 
ITAR export restrictions or similar in licenses.  However, if you want more 
info, then the US export regulations described as ITAR are documented here:

  http://www.pmddtc.state.gov/regulations_laws/itar_consolidated.html

...but they explicitly do not apply to material which legitimately is in the 
public domain:

"The controls of this part apply to the export of technical data and the export 
of classified defense articles.  Information which is in the public domain (see 
§120.11 of this subchapter and §125.4(b)(13)) is not subject to the controls of 
this subchapter."

FTP or webservers located in the US which are hosting open-source software 
generally do not check whether source IPs come from an embargoed country.  On 
the other hand, Dan Bernstein and Phil Zimmerman/PGP folks ended up fighting 
protracted legal battles over the issue of publishing cryptographic software....

Regards,
-- 
-Chuck

Disclaimer: I'm not a lawyer, nor will I play one on FreeBSD mailing lists.  :-)

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