Hi Eric, Le jeudi 16 juin 2005 à 14:45 -0400, Eric Dorland a écrit : > I'm not trying to say it's non-free. It is free. What I'm trying to > determine is if we should use the marks within Debian.
If it's free, the project as a whole has already decided to be able to include it. For the rest, it's up to the maintainer to decide what is reasonable in his point of view. Apparently, you couldn't make up your mind and so you asked for other opinions. And you had plenty : > Indeed, the most vocal (and rational) contributors seem to be saying > these demands are reasonable. I'm still not convinced. Either you have no opinion and you should be following the majority because that's was the point of your request, or you have one and you should just follow you own decision. It looks like you have your opinion and you based your opinion with respect to point #8 of the DFSG. We explained you that your reasoning was ill-advised because DFSG stands for "DF Software G" and not "DF Trademark G". What can I say more ? If you decide using "firefox" is not reasonable, please rename the package and do whatever work you like with the renamed package. But let someone else (which has no problem with the MoFo trademark license) maintain a package named "firefox" ! Sometime the project as a whole has the last word on something because it is related to our basic texts. Sometimes the project as a whole has nothing to say and it's up to the maintainer to take the decision. And this case it's clearly your decision. > Let me try another example. If, say, the Apache Foundation came to us and > said, > "Sure the code is free, but that's our trademark you're using. It will > cost you $5000 a year to use that trademark in Debian". Now we could > easily afford this as a project, would we do it? I don't think we > would do it, even though we could because a strict interpretation of > the DFSG says trademarks don't matter. Clearly we would never accept such a deal. We're all open minded but we're not dumb. :-) > The point I'm trying to make is that clearly not all trademark terms > are reasonable. Their certainly are situations where we would find > using the trademark unacceptable, even if the DFSG "apparently" says > we can. Sure ! In the example you take with $5000 fees each year, the project would never accept to pay that on its own fund. But if we have a rich maintainer (or a sponsor) willing to pay that for us I'm pretty convinced we'd accept nevertheless because it's unrelated to the fact that it's free software. > Is this Mozilla situation acceptable? I think it is, So end of discussion (but I think you mistyped ... :-)) > I think the spirit of DFSG #8 is that Debian should not have rights that the > user doesn't have in terms of the software we distribute. Yes, these > are not copyrights rights, but they are still rights. And we don't agree on that. And it looks like several other people don't agree with you on that point. But this point of the discussion won't be resolved without a rewrite of the DFSG with the added clarification. In the mean time, assume your opinion and do whatever you feel is needed. But don't impose your interpretation to the whole project when clearly there's no consensus. Cheers, -- Raphaël Hertzog Premier livre français sur Debian GNU/Linux : http://www.ouaza.com/livre/admin-debian/ -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]