On Sat, Jun 17, 2017 at 07:47:48PM +0200, Christian Dersch wrote:
> On 06/17/2017 07:41 PM, Christian Dersch wrote:
> > On 06/17/2017 07:33 PM, Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek wrote:
> >> On Sat, Jun 17, 2017 at 10:45:54AM -0500, Rex Dieter wrote:
> >>> Björn 'besser82' Esser wrote:
> >>>
> >>>> Am 16.06.2017 um 22:52 schrieb Artur Iwicki:
> >>>>> I took a shot at packaging the game and it went rather smoothly. The 
> >>>>> only
> >>>>> issue I have is that the level packs don't really have a licence; the
> >>>>> only copyright info is a line at the end of the readme, stating: "This
> >>>>> package [...] may be distributed freely, as long as its contents are 
> >>>>> left
> >>>>> intact and unmodified."
> >>>>>
> >>>>> Is that enough for Fedora, and if yes - what should the License tag for
> >>>>> the package say?
> >>>> I'd apply the 'firmware guidelines' [1] here:
> >>>>
> >>>>  > The License tag for any firmware that disallows modification must be
> >>>> set to: "Redistributable, no modification permitted"
> >>> That licensing exception applies *only* to firmware, and I'm pretty sure 
> >>> the 
> >>> content in question here cannot be argued to be firmware (please correct 
> >>> me 
> >>> if I'm wrong).
> >> The guidelines say (in the section about shareware, but I think that's 
> >> just poor
> >> editing, because there's nothing specific to shareware in the reasoning):
> >>
> >>     However, it is worth noting that some non-executable content
> >>     exists that is required to make Open Source applications
> >>     functional. An example of this would be open sourced game engines,
> >>     such as Doom, Heretic, and Descent. These game engines come with
> >>     freely distributable [...] gamedata files.
> >>
> >>     In this case, the gamedata files can be packaged and included in
> >>     Fedora, as long as the files meet the requirements for binary
> >>     firmware.
> >>
> >> ... and the requirements for firmware are: non-executable, not
> >> libraries, standalone, "available under an acceptable firmware
> >> license, which is included with the files in the packaging" and
> >> "necessary for the functionality of open source code being included in
> >> Fedora [...] where no other reliable and supported mechanisms
> >> exist.". I think the game data satisfies those requirements.
> >>
> > I agree with Björn and Rex here and think it is now allowed. We even had
> > such cases in the past where packages (also game with nonfree data)  had
> > to be removed. If in doubt: Better ask Fedora Legal about this, they can
> > give a statement on this. Either ask on their mailing list or add the
> > review request bug here https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=FE-Legal
> >
> Only agree with Rex of course, misread indentation here…
> 
> Legal wiki page: https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Legal:Main

OK, I tagged https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1462412 as blocking 
FE-Legal.
Let's see what they say.

Zbyszek
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