Hello, first I want to tell you that my english is broken ... so forgive me
:)
I read many licenses but I am a bit confused now ...
I am looking for a GPL compatible license in order to wrote a debian
application but I want that my source code can be used for non GPL usage (in
order to help as man
In message
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Frouin
Jean-Michel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes
Hello, first I want to tell you that my english is broken ... so forgive me :)
I read many licenses but I am a bit confused now ...
I am looking for a GPL compatible license in order to wrote a debian
application but I
> [...]
>
> BTW, what happened to the non-free font concerns that were expressed by
> Branden Robinson in the above-mentioned wiki page?
Maybe what the GNOME foundation has done to use an open font for their
logo can provide some inspiration to the Debian project for a solution
to this long-runni
On Tue, 20 Feb 2007 10:33:08 +0100 Frouin Jean-Michel wrote:
[...]
> I am looking for a GPL compatible license in order to wrote a debian
> application but I want that my source code can be used for non GPL
> usage (in order to help as many people as possible) if the coder
> include a copyright li
On Tue, 20 Feb 2007 16:56:45 +0100 Nicolas Spalinger wrote:
[...]
> I suggest discussing the opportunity of basing the text in the Debian
> logo on an existing open font. Or calling on designers to create a new
> Debian-specific font from scratch and then release it under a good
> license.
I agre
I totally agree with you.
Best option, IMHO, would be to have a new Debian-specific font to be
released under a free license.
Daniele Micci
>Messaggio originale
>Da: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Data: 20/02/2007 16.56
>A:
>Ogg: Re: Debian logos and trademarks
[CUT]
>AFAICT the Debian logo curren
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