Re: Debian AMD64 Archive Move

2005-05-20 Thread Guilherme de S. Pastore
Em Qua, 2005-05-11 s 03:07 -0500, Jaime Ochoa Malagn escreveu:
 Hi everybody,

Hello,

 
 I'm only have a doubt, if someone make a mirror of the official debian
 (including non-free) and all that packages are ditributed is in danger
 to being sued?

Non-free is only *distributed* by Debian, it's *not* Debian. The
software in there does not comply with the Debian Free Software
Guidelines, so, yes, you can have just about (almost) anything there.

According to the DFSG, for example, permission must *not* be given
specifically to Debian, but again, software in non-free doesn't
necessarily comply with that, so Debian may have the permission to
distribute specific software, while you may not.

That's why you should read the license of every single package from
non-free you deal with before using, redistributing, whatever. Yes, you
may be sued.

Regards,

--
Guilherme de S. Pastore (fatalerror)
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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Re: Debian AMD64 Archive Move

2005-05-11 Thread Ed Cogburn
On Sunday 08 May 2005 4:23pm, Goswin von Brederlow wrote:
 Ed Tomlinson [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
  On Sunday 08 May 2005 09:27, Joerg Jaspert wrote:
  On 10283 March 1977, Ed Tomlinson wrote:
   Whats going on == someone needs to check it. Thats it.
  
   That was the point made by Ed Cogburn.  Its already been checked in
   the other arch!  If this is not the case please explain why.  Without
   that explanation I am forced to agree with Ed - the problem are
   political...  Which is the bane of debian.
 
  We are *NOT* Debian, thats all you need to get!
 
  Ok.  So from what I understand you are worried there are packages that
  debian can distribute but only debian has the permission...   If this is
  the case is there not a way you can ask debian to distribute just the non
  free stuff?  ie.  This project builds the packages from debian sources,
  debian hosts the non free stuff on one of their servers.

 Who is to say we are allowed to build the binaries?


This isn't an answer to his question.  He's saying why not let the AMD64 
non-free be distributed from a Debian server, since you're original excuse 
was that you aren't Debian.  The answer is of course that you never even 
bothered to ask Debian for help or for a statement about your identity that 
would eliminate any theoretical legal threat.  Hell, you could have just kept 
non-free on alioth and linked to it from AMD64's new location until a 
solution to the problem was found since non-free by itself is very small and 
the move away from alioth was because of space reasons, but no, even keeping 
the old location temporarily wasn't acceptable, non-free had to go, period.  
You saw a chance to get rid of non-free, even though its temporary, even 
though a majority of DDs have officially disagreed with you in a vote, and 
its only result is to annoy the AMD64 users until AMD64 returns to a Debian 
server, all because of your extremist ideology.

I've been using Debian since pre-1.0 days when I got it off an Infomagic CD 
when I didn't have regular net access, but the times have changed, certainly 
the people around Debian have.  I never would have thought that Debian would 
reach the point where it would deliberately and **pointlessly** annoy its own 
users because of software religion, instead of just trying to produce the 
best Linux distro possible, but its apparently come to that.  No wonder 
Ubuntu looms large over Debian now, they're taking the best of Debian, but 
leaving behind the religious wars, and they will now gain strength and speed 
as Debian slows down due to endless religious infighting.  Anyway, its been 
fun, but its time to move on now, apparently.  Goodbye all.


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Re: Debian AMD64 Archive Move

2005-05-11 Thread Goswin von Brederlow
Ed Cogburn [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 On Sunday 08 May 2005 4:23pm, Goswin von Brederlow wrote:
 Ed Tomlinson [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
  On Sunday 08 May 2005 09:27, Joerg Jaspert wrote:
  On 10283 March 1977, Ed Tomlinson wrote:
   Whats going on == someone needs to check it. Thats it.
  
   That was the point made by Ed Cogburn.  Its already been checked in
   the other arch!  If this is not the case please explain why.  Without
   that explanation I am forced to agree with Ed - the problem are
   political...  Which is the bane of debian.
 
  We are *NOT* Debian, thats all you need to get!
 
  Ok.  So from what I understand you are worried there are packages that
  debian can distribute but only debian has the permission...   If this is
  the case is there not a way you can ask debian to distribute just the non
  free stuff?  ie.  This project builds the packages from debian sources,
  debian hosts the non free stuff on one of their servers.

 Who is to say we are allowed to build the binaries?


 This isn't an answer to his question.

Obviously it isn't an answere but a questions. One designed to show
him the errors of his ways.

The project can't just build the packages from non-free since nothing
says we have the right to. And in fact there are known cases the
specificaly say we DONT. Wether Debian distributes it or someone else
doesn't even figure into that.

 He's saying why not let the AMD64 
 non-free be distributed from a Debian server, since you're original excuse 
 was that you aren't Debian.  The answer is of course that you never even 
 bothered to ask Debian for help or for a statement about your identity that 
 would eliminate any theoretical legal threat.  Hell, you could have just kept 

Hell, no. Why would we ever ask? We also never got those negative
responses and rejections about this from the ftp-masters, the DPL, the
DAM, the RMs, the Security team,  We never asked for amd64 to be
added to sid over a year ago and never filed a bug about it. No never.

 non-free on alioth and linked to it from AMD64's new location until a 
 solution to the problem was found since non-free by itself is very small and 
 the move away from alioth was because of space reasons, but no, even keeping 
 the old location temporarily wasn't acceptable, non-free had to go, period.  

Actualy no. Space reasons actualy never figured into that for me. The
new system is just some 10-20 times faster, has the right
infrastructure, the right software, someone with root on the project.

And the old location is still there. Even now it still has non-free
although the old main/contrib parts have been removed. There are also
still at least 2 mirrors of it with public access as you might have
seen if you had bothered to check.

 You saw a chance to get rid of non-free, even though its temporary, even 
 though a majority of DDs have officially disagreed with you in a vote, and 
 its only result is to annoy the AMD64 users until AMD64 returns to a Debian 
 server, all because of your extremist ideology.

No DD has voted on the legality of a project outside of debian blidnly
building and distributing packages from non-free. And even if they had
it would not have any weight.

When it came to adding the packages from alioth into the DAK and we
hit non-free we took a step back, looked, saw that we can't just add
it and decided to put it off till someone can look it over in detail.

As you might have known if you had volunteered, joined the irc
channel, help patch things together, discussed solutions, etc. I
didn't see you doing any of that. Not now and not in the last 2 years.

 I've been using Debian since pre-1.0 days when I got it off an Infomagic CD 
 when I didn't have regular net access, but the times have changed, certainly 
 the people around Debian have.  I never would have thought that Debian would 
 reach the point where it would deliberately and **pointlessly** annoy its own 
 users because of software religion, instead of just trying to produce the 
 best Linux distro possible, but its apparently come to that.  No wonder 
 Ubuntu looms large over Debian now, they're taking the best of Debian, but 
 leaving behind the religious wars, and they will now gain strength and speed 

And Ubuntu also leaves behind suspectible non-free packages.

 as Debian slows down due to endless religious infighting.  Anyway, its been 
 fun, but its time to move on now, apparently.  Goodbye all.

Let me ask just one questions:

Do you have any idea who I or the other debian-amd64 members are and
what we have done the last 2 years?

You might also want to check those names against db.debian.org.

MfG
Goswin


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Re: Debian AMD64 Archive Move

2005-05-11 Thread =?ISO-8859-1?Q?Jaime_Ochoa_Malag=F3n?=
Hi everybody,

I'm only have a doubt, if someone make a mirror of the official debian
(including non-free) and all that packages are ditributed is in danger
to being sued?

Accordingly with Goswin that's nothing about complain, only the main
server of the distribution don't have non-free, the main server of
non-free packages is still being alioth.

I hope that packages still having the same process to update-compile
as before, is'n it?

Have a nice day.

-- 
Engañarse por amor es el engaño más terrible; 
es una pérdida eterna para la que no hay compensación 
ni en el tiempo ni en la eternidad. 

Kierkegaard

Jaime Ochoa Malagón
Integrated Technology
Tel: (55) 52 54 26 10



Re: Debian AMD64 Archive Move

2005-05-11 Thread Brett Parker
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Ed Cogburn [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

snip class=lotsofannoyingstuff /

 Yea, like annoying users by leaving non-free behind just because you're still 
 mad that the DDs voted to keep it.  Sure.

I *am* an AMD64 user, and I can completely understand *why* they are
being cautious. You, however, are just being plain rude to the
NON-OFFICIAL amd64 porting team. If you're *THAT* in need of non-free,
add in the i386 sources line for it and *BUILD THEM YOURSELF*. The amd64
port is *NOT* official yet, and while there's a release cycle going, I'd
rather the developers GOT ON WITH THE RELEASE, than waste time on the
packages in non-free, just what exactly do you need from there that you
can't build anyway?

Also, if you're *really* that bothered, why not use Ubuntu which has
*official* support for amd64? (I know my reasons for sticking to debian
unstable, do you?)

Thanks,
- -- 
Brett Parker
web:   http://www.sommitrealweird.co.uk/
email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Re: Debian AMD64 Archive Move

2005-05-11 Thread Tollef Fog Heen
* Ed Cogburn 

| We ARE Debian for Heaven's sake!

I can't see that you've done anything at all for the AMD64 port, nor
are you a DD.  Please go troll somewhere else.

-- 
Tollef Fog Heen,''`.
UNIX is user friendly, it's just picky about who its friends are  : :' :
  `. `' 
`-  


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Re: Debian AMD64 Archive Move

2005-05-10 Thread Ed Cogburn
On Sunday 08 May 2005 9:27am, Joerg Jaspert wrote:
 On 10283 March 1977, Ed Tomlinson wrote:
  Whats going on == someone needs to check it. Thats it.
 
  That was the point made by Ed Cogburn.  Its already been checked in the
  other arch!  If this is not the case please explain why.  Without that
  explanation I am forced to agree with Ed - the problem are political... 
  Which is the bane of debian.

 We are *NOT* Debian


We ARE Debian for Heaven's sake!  This move to another server is just 
TEMPORARY!  We WILL be Debian as soon as sarge gets out and development on 
etch picks up.  Who in the world is going to get upset when they know we will 
soon be part of official Debian, and they've already given permission for 
Debian to distribute their stuff!  Get real people!

How many non-free packages have been cleared?  Why haven't you at least set up 
non-free and moved the packages known to be ok into it?  I know for sure that 
the rogue-like games in non-free are perfectly fine and can brought on-line 
now, since they and a lot of other stuff is in non-free just because they are 
old pre-GPL software with don't sell for money restrictions which make 
them fail the DFSG test on distribution, but are otherwise fully open-source 
(and who's earlier authors can no longer be found to ask them if they'd agree 
to a change to the GPL or some other Free license).

In fact, looking through the non-free docs section, most of that can go in 
right now because they don't require anyone's permission to distribute since 
they're in non-free because of the dispute between Debian and FSF over 
documentation.


 thats all you need to get!


Hogwash.  This sounds like an extremely defensive response.  How many packages 
have been cleared for non-free?  Why haven't you just put up a non-free 
section with the stuff thats been cleared?  Why has it been more than a week, 
with no non-free section at all, no indication of how the vetting process 
is going, and with you telling us above that we don't need to know anything 
more?  Now do you understand why I'm just a little bit skeptical?

Just establish the non-free section and move everything over.  If anyone 
complains then just drop the package they're complaining about.  Of course, 
NO ONE is going to complain since they know we will become Debian soon 
anyway (and for all intents we ARE Debian - just not on their server), and 
they've already given Debian permission to distribute.  For the rest of 
non-free, permission to distribute is not an issue, and not the reason 
they're in non-free to begin with.

Re-evaluating non-free is just silly when we're going to officially become 
Debian again in a few months, certainly less than a year, anyway (assuming 
Debian gets Sarge out soon).  Heck, Debian doesn't even advertise us, we're 
the bastard child they don't want to talk about, because when they do it 
reignites the argument about which architectures to officially support, and 
why... and why not.  NO ONE IS GOING TO CARE ABOUT OUR NON-FREE!


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Re: Debian AMD64 Archive Move

2005-05-10 Thread Matthew Garrett
Ed Cogburn [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 NO ONE IS GOING TO CARE ABOUT OUR NON-FREE!

You're entirely right. After having to read that lot, I'd be impressed
if anyone cared about making sure amd64 shipped with non-free.

-- 
Matthew Garrett | [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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Re: Debian AMD64 Archive Move

2005-05-10 Thread Goswin von Brederlow
Ed Cogburn [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 On Sunday 08 May 2005 9:27am, Joerg Jaspert wrote:
 On 10283 March 1977, Ed Tomlinson wrote:
  Whats going on == someone needs to check it. Thats it.
 
  That was the point made by Ed Cogburn.  Its already been checked in the
  other arch!  If this is not the case please explain why.  Without that
  explanation I am forced to agree with Ed - the problem are political... 
  Which is the bane of debian.

 We are *NOT* Debian


 We ARE Debian for Heaven's sake!  This move to another server is just 
 TEMPORARY!  We WILL be Debian as soon as sarge gets out and development on 
 

You said it yourself.

 etch picks up.  Who in the world is going to get upset when they know we will 
 soon be part of official Debian, and they've already given permission for 
 Debian to distribute their stuff!  Get real people!

 How many non-free packages have been cleared?  Why haven't you at least set 
 up 
 non-free and moved the packages known to be ok into it?  I know for sure that 
 the rogue-like games in non-free are perfectly fine and can brought on-line 
 now, since they and a lot of other stuff is in non-free just because they are 
 old pre-GPL software with don't sell for money restrictions which make 
 them fail the DFSG test on distribution, but are otherwise fully open-source 
 (and who's earlier authors can no longer be found to ask them if they'd agree 
 to a change to the GPL or some other Free license).

 In fact, looking through the non-free docs section, most of that can go in 
 right now because they don't require anyone's permission to distribute since 
 they're in non-free because of the dispute between Debian and FSF over 
 documentation.

Will you pay us for the work and cover legal fees if any should arise?

Seriously, get some patience and don't inflame the situation
please. Things like most of that is of zero help in deciding what
can go in and what not. We know most of it can, the question is what
packages are those in particular. We can't just add all of non-free
and say it is mostly OK.

 thats all you need to get!


 Hogwash.  This sounds like an extremely defensive response.  How many 
 packages 
 have been cleared for non-free?  Why haven't you just put up a non-free 
 section with the stuff thats been cleared?  Why has it been more than a week, 
 with no non-free section at all, no indication of how the vetting process 
 is going, and with you telling us above that we don't need to know anything 
 more?  Now do you understand why I'm just a little bit skeptical?

We had (an empty) non-free right after the dns switch so apt-get
wouldn't fail. And we told you exactly what the status is: Someone
has to do the work.

 Just establish the non-free section and move everything over.  If anyone 
 complains then just drop the package they're complaining about.  Of course, 
 NO ONE is going to complain since they know we will become Debian soon 
 anyway (and for all intents we ARE Debian - just not on their server), and 
 they've already given Debian permission to distribute.  For the rest of 
 non-free, permission to distribute is not an issue, and not the reason 
 they're in non-free to begin with.

The pine author would for one thing.

 Re-evaluating non-free is just silly when we're going to officially become 
 Debian again in a few months, certainly less than a year, anyway (assuming 
 Debian gets Sarge out soon).  Heck, Debian doesn't even advertise us, we're 
 the bastard child they don't want to talk about, because when they do it 
 reignites the argument about which architectures to officially support, and 
 why... and why not.  NO ONE IS GOING TO CARE ABOUT OUR NON-FREE!

It will be at least 18 month going by the release plans till etch will
be stable and sarge amd64 can be dropped. Considering the track record
of past timelines 2-3 years is probably more accurate. That is a long
time for someone to start suing.

In one point you are right though:

NO ONE IS GOING TO CARE ABOUT OUR NON-FREE! None of us anyway. With
the exception of nvidia* package it seems. That is the only package
that users missed so far. Please excuse us for not giving it higher
priority than fixing RC bugs or otherwise vital archive maintainance.

MfG
Goswin


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Re: Debian AMD64 Archive Move

2005-05-10 Thread Ed Cogburn
On Tuesday 10 May 2005 11:19am, Goswin von Brederlow wrote:
 Ed Cogburn [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
  On Sunday 08 May 2005 9:27am, Joerg Jaspert wrote:
  In fact, looking through the non-free docs section, most of that can go
  in right now because they don't require anyone's permission to distribute
  since they're in non-free because of the dispute between Debian and FSF
  over documentation.

 Will you pay us for the work and cover legal fees if any should arise?


Sure.  Because any rational person knows it won't happen.  Give us one 
reasonable example of why some one would waste time and money to sue the 
amd64.debian.net server owner in this matter, when they have absolutely 
nothing to gain, and potentially a lot to LOSE if the judge gets angry about 
the pointlessness of their suit?  This would happen in Germany, and the 
German judicial system hasn't yet become as screwed up as the American 
system.  Besides, by the time they FIND OUT, we'll be officially part of 
Debian anyway!


 Seriously, get some patience and don't inflame the situation
 please. Things like most of that is of zero help in deciding what
 can go in and what not. We know most of it can, the question is what
 packages are those in particular. We can't just add all of non-free
 and say it is mostly OK.


Yes you can.  That's my point.  Non-free has already been vetted by Debian 
itself, and we are part of Debian.  Any rational judge will see that, if 
given evidence by the Debian organization itself (see below).


  Just establish the non-free section and move everything over.  If anyone
  complains then just drop the package they're complaining about.  Of
  course, NO ONE is going to complain since they know we will become
  Debian soon anyway (and for all intents we ARE Debian - just not on their
  server), and they've already given Debian permission to distribute.  For
  the rest of non-free, permission to distribute is not an issue, and not
  the reason they're in non-free to begin with.

 The pine author would for one thing.


Then load everything up but pine, if that's the only one you know of.  I've 
already listed more packages that I know about, and I'm just a regular 
user.  I'll bet if you had asked on d.d you could have quickly put together a 
list of 30 - 50 packages which were ok.  So why nothing in over a week?  Are 
you holding up all of non-free just because of 1 package?

And what is the point?  We are Debian.  It doesn't matter which server we're 
on.


 It will be at least 18 month going by the release plans till etch will
 be stable and sarge amd64 can be dropped. Considering the track record
 of past timelines 2-3 years is probably more accurate. That is a long
 time for someone to start suing.


Hogwash again.  We aren't talking about *release* dates, Goswin, we're only 
talking about how long it takes before debian.org is ready to move the amd64 
port onto it.  Once sarge is out, everybody can get back to moving *forward*, 
as opposed to running in place right now, which means the ftpmasters of 
debian.org can do what they need to do to make room for pure64 *Sid*, and 
move it over so we get synced up as Etch.  Sarge can stay where it is, that's 
not the issue.  Getting the *next* Debian AMD64 port onto debian.org is not 
going to take 3 years.


 In one point you are right though:

 NO ONE IS GOING TO CARE ABOUT OUR NON-FREE! None of us anyway. With
 the exception of nvidia* package it seems. That is the only package
 that users missed so far.


Right, only the relatively few users of this technically unofficial and mostly 
unknown-to-the-world official Debian port have noticed you left non-free 
behind.  So explain to us why you believe any copyright holder of one of 
these problem packages OUTSIDE OF DEBIAN is going to find out about this, and 
for some irrational reason bothers to sue amd64.debian.net, because it isn't 
on debian.org (but its contents *is* Debian)?  Geez, compared to that, I'd 
say me getting hit by a meteorite when I next leave my apartment is a 
guaranteed certainty... heck, let me go write my will before I go to the 
grocery store.

All you need is official blessing from Debian proper, in writing, or at least 
publicly announced on the net, that yes, the AMD64 port on amd64.debian.net 
is officially part of Debian, and isn't on debian.org only because of 
technical problems, but will be physically integrated soon (which is all 
true).  With that, you don't have to worry about any lawsuits.  So please 
stop with this weird excuse.


 Please excuse us for not giving it higher 
 priority than fixing RC bugs or otherwise vital archive maintainance.


But you do have the time to re-verify non-free all over again?  So you've 
wasted a whole week on this, *but* you'd rather be doing vital work.  
Uh-huh.  Well, I do agree with you on one thing Goswin, we all have important 
things that need to be done,  so please stop this pointless exercise, which 
basically amounts to nothing more than 

Re: Debian AMD64 Archive Move

2005-05-10 Thread Kenneth Pronovici
On Tue, May 10, 2005 at 01:07:30PM -0400, Ed Cogburn wrote:
 On Tuesday 10 May 2005 11:19am, Goswin von Brederlow wrote:
  Ed Cogburn [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
   On Sunday 08 May 2005 9:27am, Joerg Jaspert wrote:
   In fact, looking through the non-free docs section, most of that can go
   in right now because they don't require anyone's permission to distribute
   since they're in non-free because of the dispute between Debian and FSF
   over documentation.
 
  Will you pay us for the work and cover legal fees if any should arise?
 
 
 Sure.  Because any rational person knows it won't happen.  

Odd.  I'm a rational person, and I don't know that.  Maybe I'm not
really rational.  I feel rational though.  Hmm.

  Seriously, get some patience and don't inflame the situation
  please. Things like most of that is of zero help in deciding what
  can go in and what not. We know most of it can, the question is what
  packages are those in particular. We can't just add all of non-free
  and say it is mostly OK.
 
 Yes you can.  That's my point.  Non-free has already been vetted by Debian 
 itself, and we are part of Debian.  Any rational judge will see that, if 
 given evidence by the Debian organization itself (see below).

Ah, there we go with that word again...

  In one point you are right though:
 
  NO ONE IS GOING TO CARE ABOUT OUR NON-FREE! None of us anyway. With
  the exception of nvidia* package it seems. That is the only package
  that users missed so far.
 
 Right, only the relatively few users of this technically unofficial and 
 mostly 
 unknown-to-the-world official Debian port have noticed you left non-free 
 behind.  So explain to us why you believe any copyright holder of one of 
 these problem packages OUTSIDE OF DEBIAN is going to find out about this, 

Well, first off, you just posted about it on a public list...duh.

 and for some irrational reason bothers to sue amd64.debian.net,
 because it isn't on debian.org (but its contents *is* Debian)?  

And there's that word AGAIN.

 Geez, compared to that, I'd say me getting hit by a meteorite when I
 next leave my apartment is a guaranteed certainty... heck, let me go
 write my will before I go to the grocery store.

Well, we can hope, because then this stupid thread might die.

 All you need is official blessing from Debian proper, in writing, or at least 
 publicly announced on the net, that yes, the AMD64 port on amd64.debian.net 
 is officially part of Debian, and isn't on debian.org only because of 
 technical problems, but will be physically integrated soon (which is all 
 true).  With that, you don't have to worry about any lawsuits.  So please 
 stop with this weird excuse.

And you can categorically state this on what authority?  Can we assume
you're a lawyer in whatever municipality has jurisdiction?  Can you even
tell me what municipality has jurisdiction?  Sheesh, you might have a
decent argument if you constrained yourself to facts instead of
assertions...

 But you do have the time to re-verify non-free all over again?  So you've 
 wasted a whole week on this

Oh my.  A *whole week*?  I can't believe it.  Compared to how long it
took to release sarge, that's... let's see... er... insignificant.
That's the word I'm looking for.

You know what - I don't give a shit about this subject, but I'm getting
tired of posts like this one.   Chill out.

KEN

-- 
Kenneth J. Pronovici [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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Re: Debian AMD64 Archive Move

2005-05-10 Thread Wouter Verhelst
On Tue, May 10, 2005 at 01:07:30PM -0400, Ed Cogburn wrote:
 On Tuesday 10 May 2005 11:19am, Goswin von Brederlow wrote:
  Seriously, get some patience and don't inflame the situation
  please. Things like most of that is of zero help in deciding what
  can go in and what not. We know most of it can, the question is what
  packages are those in particular. We can't just add all of non-free
  and say it is mostly OK.
 
 Yes you can.  That's my point.  Non-free has already been vetted by Debian 
 itself, and we are part of Debian.  Any rational judge will see that, if 
 given evidence by the Debian organization itself (see below).

Are you a lawyer?

If not, I'm not particularly inclined to believe you on this count.

   Just establish the non-free section and move everything over.  If anyone
   complains then just drop the package they're complaining about.  Of
   course, NO ONE is going to complain since they know we will become
   Debian soon anyway (and for all intents we ARE Debian - just not on their
   server), and they've already given Debian permission to distribute.  For
   the rest of non-free, permission to distribute is not an issue, and not
   the reason they're in non-free to begin with.
 
  The pine author would for one thing.
 
 Then load everything up but pine, if that's the only one you know of.

It's the only one we know of /now/. There might be more. That's the
whole problem.

[rest of blatter snipped, doesn't make sense anyway]

-- 
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pavement is precisely one bananosecond


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Re: Debian AMD64 Archive Move

2005-05-10 Thread Joerg Jaspert
On 10285 March 1977, Ed Cogburn wrote:

 Will you pay us for the work and cover legal fees if any should arise?
 Sure.  Because any rational person knows it won't happen.

Laywers arent rationale.

 Give us one reasonable example of why some one would waste time and
 money to sue the  amd64.debian.net server owner in this matter, when
 they have absolutely nothing to gain, and potentially a lot to LOSE
 if the judge gets angry about the pointlessness of their suit?

With that logic: Why does SCO still exist?

 Yes you can.  That's my point.  Non-free has already been vetted by Debian 
 itself, and we are part of Debian.  Any rational judge will see that, if 
 given evidence by the Debian organization itself (see below).

No we cant. Just get a CLUE, we are *NOT* debian. We are as similar as
one can get, but the Debian stuff is on .d.o hosts.

 user.  I'll bet if you had asked on d.d you could have quickly put together a 
 list of 30 - 50 packages which were ok.  So why nothing in over a week?  Are 
 you holding up all of non-free just because of 1 package?

No. Because of all the crap that is in there and because WE HAVE MORE
IMPORTANT THINGS TODO - which includes reading crap from someone who
just trolls on lists and not does any work for it.

 And what is the point?  We are Debian.  It doesn't matter which server we're 
 on.

We arent, get a clue.

 Hogwash again.  We aren't talking about *release* dates, Goswin, we're only 
 talking about how long it takes before debian.org is ready to move the amd64 
 port onto it.  Once sarge is out, everybody can get back to moving *forward*, 
 as opposed to running in place right now, which means the ftpmasters of 
 debian.org can do what they need to do to make room for pure64 *Sid*, and 
 move it over so we get synced up as Etch.  Sarge can stay where it is, that's 
 not the issue.  Getting the *next* Debian AMD64 port onto debian.org is not 
 going to take 3 years.

Hell, please go and read what amd64.d.n is and you would see what a mess
you just wrote. amd64.d.n will exist as long as Sarge is there.

And actually there was one who just went over the non-free crap, looking
at the licenses, giving us something to work with.
If non-free is so important for you - why did you wasted time writing
such mails and havent done that work yourself?

Thats my last mail in this thread, I have more important things todo.

-- 
bye Joerg
Some AM after a mistake:
Sigh.  One shouldn't AM in the early AM, as it were.  grin


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Re: Debian AMD64 Archive Move

2005-05-10 Thread Ed Cogburn
On Tuesday 10 May 2005 3:22pm, Joerg Jaspert wrote:
 On 10285 March 1977, Ed Cogburn wrote:
  Will you pay us for the work and cover legal fees if any should arise?
 
  Sure.  Because any rational person knows it won't happen.

 Laywers arent rationale.

  Give us one reasonable example of why some one would waste time and
  money to sue the  amd64.debian.net server owner in this matter, when
  they have absolutely nothing to gain, and potentially a lot to LOSE
  if the judge gets angry about the pointlessness of their suit?

 With that logic: Why does SCO still exist?


All laywers are rational enough to know to not waste their time going after an 
organization THAT DOESN'T HAVE A BILLION DOLLARS.  That's why nobody is going 
to care, Debian is broke anyway, there is no point in a lawsuit.



  Yes you can.  That's my point.  Non-free has already been vetted by
  Debian itself, and we are part of Debian.  Any rational judge will see
  that, if given evidence by the Debian organization itself (see below).

 No we cant. Just get a CLUE, we are *NOT* debian. We are as similar as
 one can get, but the Debian stuff is on .d.o hosts.


What difference does it make where we are located if Debian itself says we're 
part of them?


  user.  I'll bet if you had asked on d.d you could have quickly put
  together a list of 30 - 50 packages which were ok.  So why nothing in
  over a week?  Are you holding up all of non-free just because of 1
  package?

 No. Because of all the crap that is in there and because WE HAVE MORE
 IMPORTANT THINGS TODO - which includes reading crap from someone who
 just trolls on lists and not does any work for it.


Nobody did any work before because it wasn't necessary.  Now you're telling us 
there has been no work done at all on non-free.  So you guys really had no 
plan at all to get non-free moved over, did you?  So why didn't you just say 
that to begin with?



  And what is the point?  We are Debian.  It doesn't matter which server
  we're on.

 We arent, get a clue.


I'm not the clueless one here.



  Hogwash again.  We aren't talking about *release* dates, Goswin, we're
  only talking about how long it takes before debian.org is ready to move
  the amd64 port onto it.  Once sarge is out, everybody can get back to
  moving *forward*, as opposed to running in place right now, which means
  the ftpmasters of debian.org can do what they need to do to make room for
  pure64 *Sid*, and move it over so we get synced up as Etch.  Sarge can
  stay where it is, that's not the issue.  Getting the *next* Debian AMD64
  port onto debian.org is not going to take 3 years.

 Hell, please go and read what amd64.d.n is and you would see what a mess
 you just wrote. amd64.d.n will exist as long as Sarge is there.


And I've said twice now that I'm not talking about Sarge, I'm talking about 
Sid.  This has nothing to do with release dates on anything, its just about 
co-location of the port and non-free.


 And actually there was one who just went over the non-free crap, looking
 at the licenses, giving us something to work with.
 If non-free is so important for you - why did you wasted time writing
 such mails and havent done that work yourself?


Because the work has bloody well already been DONE!  Everybody knows we are 
destined to return to debian.org, and we ARE Debian now in all but a 
technicality, a technicality that won't make a bit of difference in court and 
goes away with a simple statement from Debian that we are part of them, just 
not on their servers yet.  But you guys never bothered to ask, you just threw 
out non-free without thinking about it, because it was something you wanted 
to do anyway.



 Thats my last mail in this thread, I have more important things todo.


Yea, like annoying users by leaving non-free behind just because you're still 
mad that the DDs voted to keep it.  Sure.


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Re: Debian AMD64 Archive Move

2005-05-10 Thread David Nusinow
On Wed, May 11, 2005 at 12:34:57AM -0400, Ed Cogburn wrote:
Snip lots of annoying crap

Stop acting like such a spoiled child. You want non-free for amd64? Host it
yourself until it gets moved officially. Don't like it? You've qualified
for a full refund on your purchase.

 - David Nusinow


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Re: Debian AMD64 Archive Move

2005-05-08 Thread Ed Cogburn
On Friday 06 May 2005 11:22am, Joerg Jaspert wrote:
 Hi

  Note: non-free is NOT provided yet. We need to decide what we do with
  it, as we may be forbidden to distribute some of the software in it (we
 aren't Debian).


Wait a second, if you *aren't* Debian, it should be *easier* for you to 
provide non-free, not harder.  The only problem with non-free is the internal 
politics of Debian.  Ubuntu certainly doesn't have any problem providing 
access to, but not support for, non-free.  If you're having problems that 
even Debian doesn't have, that sounds a little disturbing.  Like you're 
adopting a militant position for the AMD64 port that was even rejected (by 
the vote to keep non-free) in Debian itself?  That's scary.  Just put up 
non-free, and we can eliminate problem packages as they are identified, 
rather than keeping ALL of non-free offline until someone (who?) is 
satisfied (according to what rules?) that non-free is ok.  If its 
available from Debian's non-free repository then that is *by definition* ok 
for us, unless we are just now learning that the AMD64 port is going to take 
a more hostile position against non-DFSG software than even the minority 
within Debian itself?  What gives?



Nvidia users:  you can try getting the nvidia packages from Ubuntu at

deb http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ hoary main restricted universe 
multiverse

I don't know if they're compatible with Debian, but since Ubuntu still has 
Xfree in their archive too, they *should* be.  I also don't remember which 
section they're in, probably 'restricted' but not sure.  If all else fails, 
we could use their source file for the nvidia binary packages, and see if 
that builds for us (its a wrapper around nvidia's package that builds it The 
Debian Way - but I haven't tried it yet).

The best thing is to keep the packages you have now until we find what's going 
on.


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Re: Debian AMD64 Archive Move

2005-05-08 Thread Cameron Patrick
Ed Cogburn wrote:

   Note: non-free is NOT provided yet. We need to decide what we do with
   it, as we may be forbidden to distribute some of the software in it (we
  aren't Debian).
 
 
 Wait a second, if you *aren't* Debian, it should be *easier* for you to 
 provide non-free, not harder.

Nope.  It is guaranteed that all packages in the main archive are
distributable by anybody, whether they're the Debian project or not
(DFSG#8).  This is not necessarily the case for non-free packages,
hence they'd have to be examined individually to determine whether the
licence was acceptable.

Cameron.



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Re: Debian AMD64 Archive Move

2005-05-08 Thread Hamish Moffatt
On Sun, May 08, 2005 at 03:26:20AM -0400, Ed Cogburn wrote:
 On Friday 06 May 2005 11:22am, Joerg Jaspert wrote:
  Hi
 
   Note: non-free is NOT provided yet. We need to decide what we do with
   it, as we may be forbidden to distribute some of the software in it (we
  aren't Debian).
 
 
 Wait a second, if you *aren't* Debian, it should be *easier* for you to 
 provide non-free, not harder.  

Not necessary. For 'sattrack' for example, I got permission for us to
distribute it in Debian. But I don't know if that extends to
Debian-AMD64 (an unofficial distribution) and Ubuntu would certainly
have to ask for their own permission.


Hamish
-- 
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Re: Debian AMD64 Archive Move

2005-05-08 Thread Matthew Garrett
Ed Cogburn [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Wait a second, if you *aren't* Debian, it should be *easier* for you to 
 provide non-free, not harder.

Permission to redistribute some bits of non-free may be specific to
Debian. Alternatively, packages may be buildable but no permission to
rebuild them granted. There's all sorts of potential issues with
non-free licenses. This isn't part of some sort of anti-non-free
campaign.

-- 
Matthew Garrett | [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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Re: Debian AMD64 Archive Move

2005-05-08 Thread Joerg Jaspert
On 10283 March 1977, Ed Cogburn wrote:

  Note: non-free is NOT provided yet. We need to decide what we do with
  it, as we may be forbidden to distribute some of the software in it (we
 aren't Debian).
 Wait a second, if you *aren't* Debian, it should be *easier* for you to 
 provide non-free, not harder.

No, not beeing Debian makes it only harder, not easier.
There may be stuff in it with Yes, Debian is allowed to distribute it
- which makes it undistributable for anyone else, except he gets the
same.
Or stuff you aren't allowed to built and then distribute or whatever
else some idiot thought about for his license.

 The only problem with non-free is the internal politics of Debian.

No.

 Ubuntu certainly doesn't have any problem providing access to, but not
 support for, non-free.

I dont care what/how they do it. Maybe they analyzed it, or just ignore
it and wait if someone plays law-games with them, i dont know.
I dont want law-games for me or for our mirrors or for the place where
we host the machine, thats not worth the stuff thats in there, so its
not added right away.

 The best thing is to keep the packages you have now until we find what's 
 going 
 on.

Whats going on == someone needs to check it. Thats it.


-- 
bye Joerg
HE Lalalala ... Ich bin die Sponsoren-Schlampe - Wer hat heute Lust?


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Re: Debian AMD64 Archive Move

2005-05-08 Thread Ed Tomlinson
On Sunday 08 May 2005 05:02, Joerg Jaspert wrote:
 On 10283 March 1977, Ed Cogburn wrote:
 
   Note: non-free is NOT provided yet. We need to decide what we do with
   it, as we may be forbidden to distribute some of the software in it (we
  aren't Debian).
  Wait a second, if you *aren't* Debian, it should be *easier* for you to 
  provide non-free, not harder.
 
 No, not beeing Debian makes it only harder, not easier.
 There may be stuff in it with Yes, Debian is allowed to distribute it
 - which makes it undistributable for anyone else, except he gets the
 same.
 Or stuff you aren't allowed to built and then distribute or whatever
 else some idiot thought about for his license.
 
  The only problem with non-free is the internal politics of Debian.
 
 No.
 
  Ubuntu certainly doesn't have any problem providing access to, but not
  support for, non-free.
 
 I dont care what/how they do it. Maybe they analyzed it, or just ignore
 it and wait if someone plays law-games with them, i dont know.
 I dont want law-games for me or for our mirrors or for the place where
 we host the machine, thats not worth the stuff thats in there, so its
 not added right away.
 
  The best thing is to keep the packages you have now until we find what's 
  going 
  on.
 
 Whats going on == someone needs to check it. Thats it.

That was the point made by Ed Cogburn.  Its already been checked in the other
arch!  If this is not the case please explain why.  Without that explanation I 
am
forced to agree with Ed - the problem are political...  Which is the bane of 
debian.

Ed Tomlinson


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Re: Debian AMD64 Archive Move

2005-05-08 Thread Joerg Jaspert
On 10283 March 1977, Ed Tomlinson wrote:

 Whats going on == someone needs to check it. Thats it.
 That was the point made by Ed Cogburn.  Its already been checked in the other
 arch!  If this is not the case please explain why.  Without that explanation 
 I am
 forced to agree with Ed - the problem are political...  Which is the bane of 
 debian.

We are *NOT* Debian, thats all you need to get!

-- 
bye Joerg
wiggy Memory is like gasoline. You use it up when you are running. Of
wiggy course you get it all back when you reboot...; Actual explanation
wiggy obtained from the Micro$oft help desk.


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Re: Debian AMD64 Archive Move

2005-05-08 Thread John Hasler
Ed Cogburn writes:
 Wait a second, if you *aren't* Debian, it should be *easier* for you to
 provide non-free, not harder.  The only problem with non-free is the
 internal politics of Debian.  Ubuntu certainly doesn't have any problem
 providing access to, but not support for, non-free.

One of the common reasons for packages to be in non-free is that they have
non-commercial clauses in their licenses.  This means that Debian can
distribute them free of charge but they cannot be put on CDs and sold.  In
some cases they may not even be _used_ for anything but personal use.
Others contain clauses forbidding their use for certain purposes or by
certain agencies.  The only thing you can say for sure about all the
packages in non-free is that Debian can make them available for
downloading.  Anyone contemplating redistributing non-free should examine
the license in every single package.
-- 
John Hasler


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Re: Debian AMD64 Archive Move

2005-05-08 Thread Joerg Jaspert
On 10283 March 1977, Ed Tomlinson wrote:

  Whats going on == someone needs to check it. Thats it.
  That was the point made by Ed Cogburn.  Its already been checked in the 
  other
  arch!  If this is not the case please explain why.  Without that 
  explanation I am
  forced to agree with Ed - the problem are political...  Which is the bane 
  of debian.
 We are *NOT* Debian, thats all you need to get!
 Ok.  So from what I understand you are worried there are packages that debian 
 can
 distribute but only debian has the permission...

Right.

 If this is the case is there not a way you can ask debian to
 distribute just the non free stuff?  ie.  This project builds the
 packages from debian sources, debian hosts the non free stuff on one
 of their servers.

Which will happen with the move of amd64 into the debian archive - but
that wont happen for sarge.

In the meantime someone pointed me to http://nonfree.alioth.debian.org/
where someone already did the work to classify the non-free crap.

Which means that one amd64 guy now needs to sit down, kicking out
anything thats undistributable for us, and then let us include it.
(As *one random* example, distributed-net is undistribtable for us, as
we arent Debian).

*I* wont do it, I have more important things to do. I will only help
with the final import into our archive after someone did the work.

-- 
bye Joerg
(Irgendwo von heise.de):
Jesus war ein typischer Student:
- Lebte bis er 30 war bei den Eltern, - Hatte lange Haare
- Wenn er mal was tat dann wars ein Wunder


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Re: Debian AMD64 Archive Move

2005-05-08 Thread Ed Tomlinson
On Sunday 08 May 2005 09:27, Joerg Jaspert wrote:
 On 10283 March 1977, Ed Tomlinson wrote:
 
  Whats going on == someone needs to check it. Thats it.
  That was the point made by Ed Cogburn.  Its already been checked in the 
  other
  arch!  If this is not the case please explain why.  Without that 
  explanation I am
  forced to agree with Ed - the problem are political...  Which is the bane 
  of debian.
 
 We are *NOT* Debian, thats all you need to get!

Ok.  So from what I understand you are worried there are packages that debian 
can
distribute but only debian has the permission...   If this is the case is there 
not a way
you can ask debian to distribute just the non free stuff?  ie.  This project 
builds the
packages from debian sources, debian hosts the non free stuff on one of their 
servers.

Thanks
Ed Tomlinson


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Re: Debian AMD64 Archive Move

2005-05-08 Thread Goswin von Brederlow
John Hasler [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 Ed Cogburn writes:
 Wait a second, if you *aren't* Debian, it should be *easier* for you to
 provide non-free, not harder.  The only problem with non-free is the
 internal politics of Debian.  Ubuntu certainly doesn't have any problem
 providing access to, but not support for, non-free.

 One of the common reasons for packages to be in non-free is that they have
 non-commercial clauses in their licenses.  This means that Debian can
 distribute them free of charge but they cannot be put on CDs and sold.  In
 some cases they may not even be _used_ for anything but personal use.
 Others contain clauses forbidding their use for certain purposes or by
 certain agencies.  The only thing you can say for sure about all the
 packages in non-free is that Debian can make them available for
 downloading.  Anyone contemplating redistributing non-free should examine
 the license in every single package.
 -- 
 John Hasler

More specifically: Debian can distribute those sources and debs
already available.

Debian may not be allowed to rebuild the source or build it for more
archs (or distribute any debs, only source, as is the case for pine).

MfG
Goswin


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Re: Debian AMD64 Archive Move

2005-05-08 Thread Goswin von Brederlow
Ed Tomlinson [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 On Sunday 08 May 2005 09:27, Joerg Jaspert wrote:
 On 10283 March 1977, Ed Tomlinson wrote:
 
  Whats going on == someone needs to check it. Thats it.
  That was the point made by Ed Cogburn.  Its already been checked in the 
  other
  arch!  If this is not the case please explain why.  Without that 
  explanation I am
  forced to agree with Ed - the problem are political...  Which is the bane 
  of debian.
 
 We are *NOT* Debian, thats all you need to get!

 Ok.  So from what I understand you are worried there are packages that debian 
 can
 distribute but only debian has the permission...   If this is the case is 
 there not a way
 you can ask debian to distribute just the non free stuff?  ie.  This project 
 builds the
 packages from debian sources, debian hosts the non free stuff on one of their 
 servers.

Who is to say we are allowed to build the binaries?

Take pine for example. Distribution of binaries is specifically
prohibited. Only source can be in non-free. If we just add non-free to
the buildd and upload that anywhere we violate the license and risk
getting sued. For other sources the maintainer has special permission
to build and upload binaries for Debian but again we don't.

And yes, Debian has the exact same problem. That is why non-free is
not autobuild even in Debian.

 Thanks
 Ed Tomlinson

MfG
Goswin


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Debian AMD64 Archive Move

2005-05-06 Thread Joerg Jaspert
Hi

As announced earlier the Debian AMD64 archive moved away from alioth
on the weekend from April 30 til today, May 2. Well, we are still
polishing some bits, but hey - 99% of it works.

For the impatient here are the important things you need to know:
- Modify /etc/apt/sources.list to include one deb-line from
  http://amd64.debian.net/README.mirrors.html and choose either sarge or
  sid to use. Choose the mirror that is nearest to you, to get the best
  possible result and to distribute the load to multiple hosts.
  
  All mirrors listed there get a push from the archive, so they are
  updated as soon as something changed.

  You will probably see that a lot of packages get refetched on the next
  apt-get/dselect/aptitude/whatever run you do. This is because amd64 no
  longer rebuilts the architecture independent packages anymore. As
  apt-get is sometimes a bit stupid you may need to do an apt-get clean
  run before you update your system, or it wont fetch the packages but
  keeps nagging you about them.


 Note: non-free is NOT provided yet. We need to decide what we do with
 it, as we may be forbidden to distribute some of the software in it (we aren't
 Debian).
 The best thing would be someone willing to do the work checking the
 licenses and telling us what's free enough to ship it. While you are
 doing the work - think about a bigger solution, usable by everyone,
 like a database of packages in non-free, that contains information
 about any package and its status. Probably compared against DFSG as a
 quick check and some more detailed check attached. Accessible for
 anyone who has interest in it. That would be most useful.


If you are a mirror admin the next paragraph is for you, if not you can
skip it.
We already provide a bunch of mirrors with the so-called push-mirroring,
which means you (your mirror script) gets a notice to update its copy
as soon as something is changed in our archive. 
If you are interested in this and also want it, please contact me
directly and we set it up.


While we are at it we would like to thank (in no particular order)
  Andreas 'aba' Barth,
  Kurt Roeckx, 
  Goswin Brederlow and
  Joerg Jaspert,
doing the work for the move, and 
  FNB TU Darmstadt, 
who kindly host our machine.


Now, for all the interested folks out there, some more information about
the archive, the release we want to do and how we intend to handle some
things.

First the archive software - we are using dak[1] from the main Debian
archive, so you can expect a similar behaviour. Of course we have
differences, they are detailed here.

- We are syncing our overrides strictly with Debian, so every package
  should go into the same section/priority. Changes in Debian will
  change our overrides too.
- We sync our testing suite with the information from Debian's Britney
  (and a small script adapting that to our binary packages). That way we
  are as close to official Sarge as possible, except where we really
  need to patch a package (see below in security paragraph).
- We are syncing our archive daily with new uploads to Debian. Basically,
  we just import the source and the binary_all debs and then let our
  autobuilders do the work. That happens somewhere in the night, after
  dinstall on debian finished and stuff is on the mirror network available.
- Our new GPG Key for the archive (available on any keyserver that syncs),
  is
  pub   1024D/B5F5BBED 2005-04-24
Key fingerprint = C20C A1D9 499D ECBB D8BD  ACF9 E415 B2B4 B5F5 BBED
  uid  Debian AMD64 Archive Key debian-amd64@lists.debian.org
  sub   2048g/34FC6FE5 2005-04-24

  The Key is signed by Andreas Barth, Tollef Fog Heen and me, and we are
  the only ones with access to it.

Access to the main archive server amd64.debian.net is limited[2], only
very few people who really need access to it actually have it. The
public can access it via http, but probably prefers a local mirror.

If you have administrative questions about the machine or some parts of
this archive, please contact one of the following people:

Joerg Jaspert, Admin of the whole machine and ftpmaster.
Andreas 'aba' Barth, ftpmaster, beeing responsible for the amd64 w-b.
Tollef Fog Heen, ftpmaster, will do security for the stable release.

The contact address is [EMAIL PROTECTED], please never direct
any amd64 related question to the @debian.org counterpart.

There are more people, like our buildd admins
Frederik Schueler
Kurt Roeckx
Tollef Fog Heen
who keep the new .debs coming in[3].

If you are interested in build-logs of your package in AMD64 you may
visit amd64.ftbfs.de. We will keep all our logs there, as long as we
follow unstable/testing, later on we will keep the logs of
stable-proposed-updates there.[4]


cdimage.debian.org is going to build and host CD/DVD images in the
same way it does for all other architectures. Which means netboot,
jigdo, and whatever else is normally included.


Next important point for users is packages.debian.org. We