One solution to the problem is to get the source code, delete the lines which 
insert the copyright notice (“modify the code”), compile the code, and use 
this. This is legal as the code is released under GPL and GPL allows 
modifications. (You could release your modifications too. This is how Debian 
makes ‘Iceweasel’ out of ‘Firefox’ -- just so that Debian users don't have to 
sign a EULA with Mozilla.)

Still, Ghostscript (in its present state) should not be a part of Debian. 
Indeed, if signing a EULA is unacceptable, how much worse is having your code 
copyrighted by a third party!

~Vaibhav


> pdf2ps, which is a frontend to gs, inserts a copyright
> notice in all PS files it produces. I am using `GPL
> Ghostscript 8.71 (2010-02-10)'. Files look like this:
> 
> %!PS-Adobe-3.0
> ...
> %%Creator: GPL Ghostscript 871 (pswrite)
> ...
> %%BeginProlog
> % This copyright applies to everything between here and the
> %%EndProlog:
> % Copyright (C) 2010 Artifex Software, Inc.  All rights
> reserved.
> %%BeginResource: procset GS_pswrite_2_0_1001 1.001 0
> ...
> %%EndProlog
> ...
> %%EOF


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