On 2012-10-26 09:43, Corinna Vinschen wrote: | | Despite all the arguments, here's a question: If PD is such a bad idea, | why is Fedora's setup package, which provides much the same service | as our base-files package, PD licensed as well?
Perhaps it was done and forgotten. World is diferent today; software needs more scrutinizing nowadays. In Debian the sysprofile package is Dual licensed under both the GPL and BSD licenses. | Why on earth should it be required to put really simple startup scripts | under more complex than the absolute necessary licenses? We must remember that "public domain" is not a license[1]. The safe choices are the well known ones. "Just as there is nothing in the law that permits a person to dump personal property in the public highway, there is nothing that permits the dumping of intellectual property into the public domain — except as happens in due course when any applicable copyrights expire. Until those copyrights expire, there is no mechanism in the law by which an owner of software can simply elect to place it in the public domain." http://rosenlaw.com/lj16.htm FSF, OSI and Attorneys[2] that specialize on Open Source, all recommend selecting a license over waiving copyright i.e. using "public domain". Jari [1] CC0 tried to be, but the actual legal text may not make it no simpler or straightforward than the well understood and recognized BSD, MIT or GPL. [2] Search Google for Lawrence Rosen (former legal lead of OSI) or Mark Radcliffe (the intellectual property attorney who's general counsel to the Open Source Initiative)