Well, all that is great, but what should I understand with all that, is
there no license under which I can find songs that debian would accept
in the main repository?
Please make a short and clear answer. :)
Evan Prodromou [EMAIL PROTECTED]
My opinion is based on the contribution of debian-legal participants, of
the workgroup participants, and of my own review of the licenses.
I don't doubt that. However, that's still your opinion rather than the
Workgroup's. I don't mean anything bad by that.
Mathieu Stumpf escribe:
Well, all that is great, but what should I understand with all that, is
there no license under which I can find songs that debian would accept
in the main repository?
AFAIK CC-by would allow it.
Please make a short and clear answer. :)
Hopefully mine is. :)
On Thu, 8 Mar 2007 09:46:05 +1000 Kel Modderman wrote:
On Thursday 08 March 2007 04:23, Francesco Poli wrote:
[...]
However, the license does not meet the DFSG (it's not even close to
meeting them...): has Intel been contacted and asked to provide the
firmware (with source code) in a
Francesco Poli wrote:
On Thu, 8 Mar 2007 09:46:05 +1000 Kel Modderman wrote:
On Thursday 08 March 2007 04:23, Francesco Poli wrote:
[...]
However, the license does not meet the DFSG (it's not even close to
meeting them...): has Intel been contacted and asked to provide the
On Thu, Mar 8, 2007 at 15:34:32 -0500, Benjamin Seidenberg wrote:
For some companies I would agree, but as has been said, intel has been
opensourcing a lot lately, and as that FAQ says, later versions are
free, which shows they must have some concern.
s/free/distributable/
None of the ipw*
On Thu, 08 Mar 2007 15:34:32 -0500 Benjamin Seidenberg wrote:
Francesco Poli wrote:
[...]
We would really love to be more permissive, but we cannot, 'cause
that other evil guy forbids us.
As I keep reading answers like this, I'm less and less convinced of
their good faith...
[...]
For
On 3/9/07, Francesco Poli [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
For a lot of wifi cards (dunno about Intel's) it's regulatory - they
can't sell cards that can be easily modified to exceed FCC limits, so
they limit it in a binary firmware. If they gave away the source,
people could easily modify the card
Great, there are 996 songs under CC-by (2.0+2.5) if I just look at
dogmazic.net.
Thank you, that's a clear answer. Now I can go ahead! :)
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