You might also be interested in medibuntu which is maintained by some Ubuntu developpers.
Christophe On Wed, Jan 6, 2010 at 8:33 PM, Martin Owens <docto...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hey Neil, > > It really does depend on what codecs and extras. > > For all of the totem plugins, you should be fine. Those plugins aren't > illegal in any way, anywhere in the world. There is just a legal grey > area about weather or not that Free Software, maybe, possibly, could be > covered by patents which maybe, possibly be attractive to the owners to > sue over. Even then it's a civil case matter, not a criminal one. > > For w32codecs and ms-corefonts, that's illegal. It's copyright > infringement if you start dishing them out. > > For playing encrypted dvds, libdvdcss2, check to see if your country has > enacted a law similar to the EUCD and DMCA (Digital Millennium Copyright > Act) and also check for clauses that allow for the breaking of > encryption for compatibility. For instance in this case it's probably > more ok to use libdvdcss in the USA than it is in the EU since the > American got a weak compatibility clause that could offer protection. > > I think you can ship the flash player deb, but you'll also need to get > the flash player binary that the deb downloads. Check the licensing > agreement to see if you can redistribute. > > IANAL, this is just what I've picked up. > > Martin, > > On Wed, 2010-01-06 at 18:39 +0200, Neil Coetzer wrote: >> Hi all, >> >> I would like to get some input on whether or not our LoCo should be >> involved in the following sort of project: >> >> The most common query/complaint we receive from new Ubuntu users in >> Zimbabwe concerns the lack of proprietary codecs, particularly in >> light of the fact that a lot of people here have no Internet access at >> all and are therefore unable to install them later in the usual >> manner. >> >> To solve this problem, a script has been written with a graphical >> front-end, to install these codecs offline (packaged with a cache of >> the required packages). >> >> Our concerns are that since these codecs are not shipped with Ubuntu >> for reasons of the legalities involved, would it be acceptable for us >> to make the script and package cache available on our LoCo site or >> not? We would like to have this available on our LoCo Web site (mostly >> for team members to be able to download and then use later offline >> where necessary), but if the general feeling on this is that it >> wouldn't be "right", then I'll possibly place it on my company site >> instead. >> >> Any feedback would be appreciated. >> >> -- >> Regards, >> >> Neil Coetzer >> Team Contact >> Ubuntu Zimbabwe LoCo Team >> ------------------------------------------- >> http://www.ubuntu.org.zw >> http://zimbabwe.ubuntuforums.org >> http://www.ubuntu-zw.org >> ------------------------------------------- >> http://www.karigon.net >> Thinking way outside the box >> > > > > -- > loco-contacts mailing list > loco-contacts@lists.ubuntu.com > https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/loco-contacts > -- loco-contacts mailing list loco-contacts@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/loco-contacts