Le mercredi 08 décembre 2010 à 09:51 +0100, Wolfgang Bornath a écrit : > 2010/12/8 andre999 <[email protected]>: > > > > By presenting a special set of repositories for patent-affected software, we > > could be seen as justifying these patent sharks. > > In their minds, why else would be accommodate them ? > > Patented software is a reality in some countries. You can't discuss it > away with logical reason or morale arguments. > > > Ok, I think, how many other distros have such repositories. According to > > comments on the list : none. > > Oh, really? Some (like Mandriva) do not have such a repository because > they do not distribute such software at all, PLF does that for > Mandriva. What about Ubuntu? What about Fedora?
Fedora has rpmfusion ( http://rpmfusion.org/ ) and livna ( http://rpm.livna.org/ ) for libdvdcss. There is stringent requirements : http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/ForbiddenItems Ubuntu has a multiverse repository, and there is also various ppa, and medibuntu ( http://medibuntu.org/ ). Medibuntu is a fork of the PLF project ( even if they never credited us for the content of their start page ... ). Ubuntu is not as rigorous than Fedora or Debian. Debian either do not care of the patent problem, or use some individual repository ( the one of Marillat for example ). AFAIK, the main problem they had with mplayer were around the licensing and the technical issue more than patents. The ftp-masters group check packages, there is a FAQ of the various issues : http://ftp-master.debian.org/REJECT-FAQ.html , but I never noticed any specific discussions around patents. Even the latest discussion about lame on debian legal was around the license used. Gentoo do not care at all, as does most source based distribution ( or the BSD, for the ports ). There is no use flag to filter for patents or anything, according to http://www.gentoo.org/dyn/use-index.xml Mandriva has PLF ( http://plf.zarb.org/ ), even if the patent issue is lightly treated ( given the lack of written policy on this regard ). Opensuse do not ship mp3 or various restricted codecs, according to http://opensuse-community.org/Restricted_formats/11.3 . AFAIK, this is handled by http://packman.links2linux.de/ . Arch seems to offers the software too. > > And what happens if there is a patent pursuit against Mageia or it's mirrors > > ? > > Even if we have a separate repository, the package in question might end up > > being withdrawn. But it seems doubtful that one would want to withdraw all > > potentially threatened packages. > > (That would be a big victory for patent sharks.) > > A patent pursuit will not be aimed against Mageia because Mageia is a > french organisation where there are no software patents. But lawsuits > could be aimed at those mirror maintainers who are runnning their > mirrors in such countries which allow software patents. There is also the case of private society who could provides services around the distribution. -- Michael Scherer
