On Nov 4, 2013, at 4:16 PM, Paul Tagliamonte wrote:

> I'm going to copy this (and bounce the last mail here) to debian-legal.
> 
> Again, I'd like to stress how much I really dislike the idea of another
> license written for fun.

+1.

> 
> On Mon, Nov 04, 2013 at 10:13:33PM +0100, Elmar Stellnberger wrote:
>> 
>> S-FSL v1.3.3 uploaded at http://www.elstel.org/license/
>> 
>>  Having clearly considered your critics I have published a reworked
>> edition
>> of S-FSL which should more strictly adhere to the terms of OSS-software.
>> As you can understand and as I have already partially described there are
>> still issues to me which discourage me from using an existing license like
>> f.i. GPL or BSD.
>> 
>>  The new license is posted here for public review.

From S-FSL v.1.3.3 [http://www.elstel.org/license/S-FSL-v1.3.3.txt]:

"The program may be distributed by a third party given that the program is 
distributed in its original state completely without any kind of modifications 
or patches. If you need to re-distribute a patched version of this program you 
need to distribute the patches separately from the original so that the 
pristine version can be restored at any time."

As Paul wrote, this seems incompatible with DFSG #3 - and possibly #4 as well.

"As far as you are not a public distributor you are oblidged to send a copy of 
your patches to the original authors referred to herein as the authors of the 
first version of the program as being listed in the changelog or program header 
whenever you publish or exchange your patches with other people."

This fails the 'Desert Island' test in the DFSG FAQ #9(a). Also, 'public 
distributor' is not properly defined in this part of the license.

"Modifications applied to this program may not affect the name, original 
version, copyright or any reference given to the authors such as their email 
addresses or their web presence and/or page in any part of the program or any 
files attached to the program. [...] If you want to develop a separate branch 
of this program the original authors need to give you permission. Developing a 
separate branch means not to use the naming convention proposed in the 
preceding paragraph."

If one were to redistribute the program under a different name that would 
require permission from the original authors? That seems not compatible with 
DFSG #3.

"Distribution of the program by third parties must be done free of charge apart 
from fees for the physical reproduction of the data medium."

Seems incompatible with DFSG #1.


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