On Fri, May 29, 2015 at 10:41:58PM +1000, Riley Baird wrote: > 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.
the terminology being thrown around was so confusing I had to look at the source to see what was actually going on here :) There was *one* work, which *was* LGPL. By an author. They published it on their own. This work will forver be LGPL. The author of this package took that source, and *modified* it (modified, *not* combined). This modified work is distributed as GPLv3. I don't see the point in adding LGPL, *IFF* the works *ARE* modified and derived works. Not just straight copy-paste. I'd be interested in what changes took place, I don't see any marking of it. Defer to the ftp-master who processed it. Ask them for clarification (feel free to point to this mail) In the case where two works are combined into one file - this is functionally compilation (at least not the preferred form of modification, which means it's *not* source) This doesn't appear to be the case, this looks like LGPLv2.1+ files were modified by someone licensing their changes under GPLv3+, which is legit. I believe treating this file as GPLv3+ is fine / good enough. Cheers, Paul -- .''`. Paul Tagliamonte <paul...@debian.org> | Proud Debian Developer : :' : 4096R / 8F04 9AD8 2C92 066C 7352 D28A 7B58 5B30 807C 2A87 `. `'` http://people.debian.org/~paultag `- http://people.debian.org/~paultag/conduct-statement.txt
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