I don't quite see how this matter fits in to DFSG, or if it touches on it at all, but Berkeley DB from Sleepycat has come up with a curiosity that's new to me; they now state at <URL:http://www.sleepycat.com/licensing.html>:
The term "redistribution" in the Berkeley DB public license means
your application is distributed to more than a single physical
location. Installing copies of an application at different
physical locations, whether they are customer sites or sites of a
single organization, is redistribution.
Examples of redistribution include:
[...]
* Building an application that you install on your company's
servers in data centers around the world.
I.e. your right to use Berkeley DB for free for in-house projects is
cancelled, and you're obliged to pay them, if your in-house project
spans multiple physical sites within your company.
My gut feeling is that this is discriminatory in intent, it doesn't
have the flavour of DFSG, but I can't quite find anything explicit
to use to say that this should be grounds for moving Berkeley DB
into non-free.
-Bennett
pgpH8c8snxqes.pgp
Description: PGP signature

