Severity: serious Package: xfonts-75dpi Note, while this is filed against xfonts-75dpi, it affects several of the font packages generated from the xfree86 source package, feel free to reassign to another package.
The two large groups in question are the Utopia (UT*) and the Lucida
(lu*) fonts.
The only license I can find on the Utopia fonts is in the font files
themselves:
COPYRIGHT "Copyright (c) 1989, 1991 Adobe Systems Incorporated. All Rights Reserved."
Obviously without something further we do not even have a license to
distribute them, hopefully I am simply missing a license somewhere that
gives us proper rights, however..
The license case for the Lucida fonts is a little more interesting.
In the font files is the following notice:
COMMENT (c) Copyright Bigelow & Holmes 1986, 1985. Lucida is a registered
COMMENT trademark of Bigelow & Holmes. See LEGAL NOTICE file for terms
COMMENT of the license.
The contents of the file in question is below, what rights it gives is,
a very interesting question. It does not explicitly give permission to
modify, however it is vague enough that -legal should probably examine
it.
(Note, this is a /different/ license then the one Branden recently sent
B&H a letter about.)
This is the LEGAL NOTICE pertaining to the Lucida fonts from Bigelow & Holmes:
NOTICE TO USER: The source code, including the glyphs or icons
forming a par of the OPEN LOOK TM Graphic User Interface, on this
tape and in these files is copyrighted under U.S. and international
laws. Sun Microsystems, Inc. of Mountain View, California owns
the copyright and has design patents pending on many of the icons.
AT&T is the owner of the OPEN LOOK trademark associated with the
materials on this tape. Users and possessors of this source code
are hereby granted a nonexclusive, royalty-free copyright and
design patent license to use this code in individual and
commercial software. A royalty-free, nonexclusive trademark
license to refer to the code and output as "OPEN LOOK" compatible
is available from AT&T if, and only if, the appearance of the
icons or glyphs is not changed in any manner except as absolutely
necessary to accommodate the standard resolution of the screen or
other output device, the code and output is not changed except as
authorized herein, and the code and output is validated by AT&T.
Bigelow & Holmes is the owner of the Lucida (R) trademark for the
fonts and bit-mapped images associated with the materials on this
tape. Users are granted a royalty-free, nonexclusive license to use
the trademark only to identify the fonts and bit-mapped images if,
and only if, the fonts and bit-mapped images are not modified in any
way by the user.
Any use of this source code must include, in the user documentation
and internal comments to the code, notices to the end user as
follows:
(c) Copyright 1989 Sun Microsystems, Inc. Sun design patents
pending in the U.S. and foreign countries. OPEN LOOK is a
trademark of AT&T. Used by written permission of the owners.
(c) Copyright Bigelow & Holmes 1986, 1985. Lucida is a registered
trademark of Bigelow & Holmes. Permission to use the Lucida
trademark is hereby granted only in association with the images
and fonts described in this file.
SUN MICROSYSTEMS, INC., AT&T, AND BIGELOW & HOLMES
MAKE NO REPRESENTATIONS ABOUT THE SUITABILITY OF
THIS SOURCE CODE FOR ANY PURPOSE. IT IS PROVIDED "AS IS"
WITHOUT EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTY OF ANY KIND.
SUN MICROSYSTEMS, INC., AT&T AND BIGELOW & HOLMES,
SEVERALLY AND INDIVIDUALLY, DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES
WITH REGARD TO THIS SOURCE CODE, INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE. IN NO EVENT SHALL SUN MICROSYSTEMS,
INC., AT&T OR BIGELOW & HOLMES BE LIABLE FOR ANY
SPECIAL, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES,
OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA
OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE
OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION
WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOURCE CODE.
--
1024D/E65A7801 Zephaniah E. Hull <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
92ED 94E4 B1E6 3624 226D 5727 4453 008B E65A 7801
CCs of replies from mailing lists are requested.
Why blow away at a partition when you can chip away at it? I now
present a script I just wrote that writes random bits of, well random
bits, into random places in your favorite partition or file. For best
(meaning most spectacular) results, use while the database or
filesystem is in active use.
Disclaimer: This code is untested, and it may or may not trash your
filesystem and/or database. While at least a half-assed effort has
been made to ensure that it works as designed, there is no guarantee
that its use will result in a loss of important data. I am not liable
for the lack of either direct or incidental damages.
-- Logan Shaw on ASR.
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