That's literally what I said.

d/copyright is for source not binary.
On May 29, 2015 8:42 AM, "Riley Baird" <
bm-2cvqnduybau5do2dfjtrn7zbaj246s4...@bitmessage.ch> wrote:

> > > I just had a discussion with an ftp-master who rejected one of my
> > > packages. The package in question is "missfits". It contains a
> > > directory, src/wcs/ with files that were originally released by Mark
> > > Calabretta under LGPL-2+, but changed by the upstream author (Emmanuel
> > > Bertin) and released in the package under GPL-3+.
> >
> > Upstream authors can't change licensing of any files, under any
> > conditions, ever.
> >
> > If I say a file is GPLv2+, it is forever GPLv2+, even if it's combined
> > with a GPLv3 work, in that case the *files* are still GPLv2+, that other
> > file is a GPLv3 work, and the *combined work* is distributed under the
> > terms of the GPLv3, since it satisfies the license of every file in the
> > combined / derived work.
>
> But there are multiple works being combined into the one file. So some
> parts of the file are GPLv2+ and other parts of the file are GPLv3. The
> file as a whole can only be distributed under GPLv3.
>

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