arry Rosen) and
a more senior attorney at Microsoft. So, it may not be entirely
hopeless that Sender ID be entirely usable by open source.
Daniel
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Daniel Quinlan ApacheCon! 13-17 November (3 SpamAssassin
http://www.pathname.com/~quinlan/ http://www.apachecon.com/ sessions & more)
Henning Makholm <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> What I was saying that if advance approval was the practice,
> Advance approval will never happen in any form that I think you'd find
> useful. If we "advance approved" something it would mean that we cound
> not act if we later discovered a non-fre
non-free. Most want to be OSI
approved, most want to be distributed in Debian, etc. That is why many
companies work with OSI before releasing their licenses, but since the
OSI criteria is slightly different and, more significantly, interpreted
differently, I think everyone would benefit from some s
As an observer of both the Debian and Apache licensing discussions
surrounding the development of the Apache 2.0 license, I wanted to make
a suggestion regarding the Debian legal review of licenses. It seems
like groups like the ASF want to work with Debian when revising
licenses.
However, while
e possibility of such
damage.
5) Redistributions of source code must retain this entire license.
--- end
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Daniel Quinlan anti-spam (SpamAssassin), Linux, and open
http://www.pathname.com/~quinlan/ source consulting (looking for new work)
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