On Wed, Aug 23, 2006 at 11:24:31PM +0200, Bram Moolenaar wrote: > > > The name "Open Publication License" is right, the URL was wrong. > > Could you please correct the URL then? I guess the following is the > > correct one: > I have changed it. The ftp server will soon have the updated files.
Thanks. > > Do you think it is possible to relicense the manual under a different > > license? (The best possible is usually the same that applies to the > > source code of the program itself). How many parts are taken from > > Oualline's book? Is it possible to rewrite them? We are of course > > willing to help in that, but maybe we are luckily enough that no more > > parts took from the book are still in the help ... > > It sounds like you are splitting hairs. As far as I know the OPL is a > free license, since it allows distribution and modification. What part > of the OPL makes it non-free? The OPL (meaning in this mail Open Publication License, since the same acronym is used for the Open Content License) is at the very minimum a license whose freeness is debatable. A few fact to argument this. * The Free Software Foundation itself consider the license as a free documentation license ONLY IF none of the License Options are exercised. I don't know what is the case of the Vim documentation. See http://www.fsf.org/licensing/licenses/ * The license is not OSI approved (it is not listed on http://www.opensource.org/licenses/) * The debian-legal as determined it as non DFSG-free (see http://wiki.debian.org/DFSGLicenses#head-add2e754f3a906f07e4ff1c050a2548f04ef4cbe) This latter point is motivated by two, IMO minor, points (the first and the third of http://lists.debian.org/debian-legal/2004/03/msg00226.html), and by an additional major point, namely the license fails to pass the "dissident test" (see http://people.debian.org/~bap/dfsg-faq.html). The reason is that every modification to a document published under this license must be owned by an identified author. This is the verbatim text of the test: # The Dissident test. Consider a dissident in a totalitarian state who wishes to share a modified bit of software with fellow dissidents, but does not wish to reveal the identity of the modifier, or directly reveal the modifications themselves, or even possession of the program, to the government. Any requirement for sending source modifications to anyone other than the recipient of the modified binary---in fact any forced distribution at all, beyond giving source to those who receive a copy of the binary---would put the dissident in danger. For Debian to consider software free it must not require any such excess distribution. While I think (but this is a personal opinion) that the minor points could be ignored for inclusion of the vim documentation in the debian distribution, I don't think the latter aspect could be. We would probably be forced to remove the vim documentation from the debian distribution, moving it to non-free :-((( Since I don't want that ... while on the Debian side I'm trying to get comments from the people responsible of accepting stuff into the archive ... on the "Bram" side I would like to know how hard it would be to relicense the manual under a different license. Could you please comment on that? Many thanks in advance, Cheers. -- Stefano Zacchiroli -*- Computer Science PhD student @ Uny Bologna, Italy [EMAIL PROTECTED],debian.org,bononia.it} -%- http://www.bononia.it/zack/ If there's any real truth it's that the entire multidimensional infinity of the Universe is almost certainly being run by a bunch of maniacs. -!-
signature.asc
Description: Digital signature