Re: Consensus about the Academic Free License (AFL) v3.0

2015-06-13 Thread Ángel González

On 13/06/15 06:36, Walter Landry wrote:

Ángel Gonzálezkeis...@gmail.com  wrote:

On 12/06/15 23:22, Walter Landry wrote:
I would strongly disagree here. Requiring documentation of any sort 
in addition to the source code is a big step. This is not a minor 
thing. 

I don't think requiring that some documentation is provided with the
source code, makes it unfree.

Of course it does.  Mandating a minimum quality before releasing
things may be good software practice, but it is decidely unfree.  This
license prevents a certain class of modifications that, in the
original author's eyes, makes things worse.  But later people may
disagree in good faith.  For example, suppose that there is
documentation, but it is out of date to the point where it is
misleading.  This license prevents removing that misleading
documentation.  Even if you write new documentation, you have to
distribute the old documentation as well.

Cheers,
Walter Landry
I very carefully talked about requiring *some* documentation, as 
something opposed it to all available documentation, which is what AFL 
requires and makes it problematic.
Ironically, the most free program wrt this clause is one with no 
documentation at all.



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Re: Consensus about the Academic Free License (AFL) v3.0

2015-06-13 Thread Francesco Poli
On Thu, 11 Jun 2015 08:41:07 +0900 Charles Plessy wrote:

 Le Wed, Jun 10, 2015 at 11:48:19PM +0200, Francesco Poli a écrit :
  Hello debian-legal regulars,
  I would need to ask your consensus opinion on the non-freeness of the
  Academic Free License (AFL) v3.0.
 
 Hi Francesco,
 
 I think that there is a broad consensus to accept the AFL as Free license,
 in Debian, the OSI, Fedora, the FSF, etc.

I don't see evidence of this broad consensus on debian-legal, where my
own analysis went uncontested on September 2012, as I said.

As far as the FSF is concerned (but please bear in mind that here we
are discussing what the Debian Project, not the FSF, should do!), I see
that they claim [1] the AFL v3.0 is a Free License, but they strongly
recommend to avoid it for practical reasons (due to section 9).

[1] https://www.gnu.org/licenses/license-list.en.html#AcademicFreeLicense

[...]
  - point 3) is poorly worded, but assuming it is well-intented, it is Free.

Section 3 is really unclear, to say the least.
I don't think it will be interpreted as we would like it to be.

I agree with Walter Landry that requiring all available documentation
is a big step. I think it's non-free.

 
  - regarding points 5) and 9), the FSF notes that the AFL has clause similar 
 to one of
the Open Software License that requires distributors to try to obtain 
 explicit
assent to the license 
 (http://www.gnu.org/licenses/license-list.en.html#OSLRant).
This is easy to infringe, but this is not forbidden by the DFSG (which is 
 why
we tolerate advertisement clauses, which are also easy to infringe).

Section 9 (especially when combined with section 5) is at least a
practical problem with mirrors and with many other commonly used
mechanisms for software distribution (as noted by the FSF, as well).
I am convinced that it is a restriction imposed on re-distributors
(thus failing DFSG#1).

 
  - The Attribution Notice sounds a bit like an invariant section, but it is 
 also
very similar to the NOTICE file from the Apache License, which is Free.

As also noted by Walter Landry, there's a crucial difference w.r.t.
Apache v2: the latter license requires to preserve attribution notices
within NOTICE files; the AFL v3.0 requires instead to preserve *any*
descriptive text identified as an Attribution Notice (even when this
text includes something other than attribution notices!).

I think this is non-free, unless all descriptive texts identified as
Attribution Notices only contain attribution notices.

 
 Altogether, I think that #689919 should stay closed, although it would be 
 great
 of course if the Subversion authors would manage to elimiate this license from
 their sources, because this license is not a good example to follow.

Sigh! This won't happen, if the Debian Project (and other authoritative
parties in the Free Software community) go on saying that the license
is OK anyway...

Moreover, please note that, if I understand correctly [2], the files
under consideration are no longer included in the upstream Subversion
source archive: they are added to the debian/ directory by the
maintainer of the subversion Debian package.

[2] https://bugs.debian.org/689919#25

 
 Have a nice day,

The same to you.


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Your civil defense attorney?

2015-06-13 Thread Michael David Crawford
Dear Mrs. Ashbaugh,

Please reply with the name, postal address, telephone number as well
as email of your civil defense attorney.

If you do not already have a civil defense attorney you need to retain
one.  After you do please let me know how to contact them.

You will shortly find yourself the respondent in my complaint for
failing in your ethical obligation to provide me with a vigorous
defense when I was falsely accused of the alleged felony of making
terrorist threats, when in reality I was performing online literature
research into the effect of software faults on aviation safety.

I shall also file an ethics complaint against you with the Bar
Association of the State of California.

Consider for example, my submission to the Forum On Risks To The
Public In Computers And Related Systems:

   Subject: Air-force pilots sleep on job?
   http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/17.21.html#subj4.1

While history will never know, it is widely thought that the tragic
loss of Flight MH370 was the result of autopilot failure while the
flight crew was asleep.

Had you but lifted a finger to obtain the evidence that would have
exonerated me, or to have an investigator interview the many
witnesses, quite likely I all by myself could have prevented the cruel
senseless deaths of hundreds of innocent people.

I will also file a complaint against the State of California in
Federal Court, for not permitting me to act Pro Se, for not providing
mental health treatment while I was in jail, for permitting Judge
LaBarbera to commit the censurable offense of writing an opinion out
of court when he ordered me to Atascadero while I was not present in
the courtroom, as well as for the cruel and inhumane treatment I
received while at Atascadero.

Nex time you're at your bank, ask for a $2.00 bill.  While not
commonly used they are in circulation.  On the back is John Trumbull's
painting Declaration of Independence.  Of the five first and so
most-honored founding fathers standing before the signing table,
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Sherman.

My great uncle.

Most infuriating is that, given that I plead guilty to a felony which
never even occurred, I am no longer permitted to vote in California.

The reason America even exists, is to put a stop to such injustices as
perpetrated by people such as yourself.

Good Day,

Michael David Crawford, Consulting Software Engineer
mdcrawf...@gmail.com
http://www.warplife.com/mdc/

   Available for Software Development in the Portland, Oregon Metropolitan
Area.


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Re: Consensus about the Academic Free License (AFL) v3.0

2015-06-13 Thread Simon McVittie
On 13/06/15 15:45, Francesco Poli wrote:
 As also noted by Walter Landry, there's a crucial difference w.r.t.
 Apache v2: the latter license requires to preserve attribution notices
 within NOTICE files; the AFL v3.0 requires instead to preserve *any*
 descriptive text identified as an Attribution Notice (even when this
 text includes something other than attribution notices!).
 
 I think this is non-free, unless all descriptive texts identified as
 Attribution Notices only contain attribution notices.

The ftpmasters do not decide whether Debian will accept particular
licenses; they decide whether Debian will accept particular software.
One possible outcome for this part would be the ftpmasters deciding that
AFL-3.0 software is only Free if it does not have any Attribution
Notices that are not, in fact, attribution notices.

S


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Re: Consensus about the Academic Free License (AFL) v3.0

2015-06-13 Thread Francesco Poli
On Sat, 13 Jun 2015 22:45:54 +0100 Simon McVittie wrote:

 On 13/06/15 15:45, Francesco Poli wrote:
  As also noted by Walter Landry, there's a crucial difference w.r.t.
  Apache v2: the latter license requires to preserve attribution notices
  within NOTICE files; the AFL v3.0 requires instead to preserve *any*
  descriptive text identified as an Attribution Notice (even when this
  text includes something other than attribution notices!).
  
  I think this is non-free, unless all descriptive texts identified as
  Attribution Notices only contain attribution notices.
 
 The ftpmasters do not decide whether Debian will accept particular
 licenses; they decide whether Debian will accept particular software.
 One possible outcome for this part would be the ftpmasters deciding that
 AFL-3.0 software is only Free if it does not have any Attribution
 Notices that are not, in fact, attribution notices.

Yes, that's basically what I meant. Sorry for not being clear enough.
I think this clause is OK only for works where there are no descriptive
texts identified as Attribution Notices, but containing parts which
are not attribution notices.

I hope it's clearer now.

Unfortunately, the other problematic clauses still hold...


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