Simon Richter <[email protected]> writes:

> Hi,
>
> On 2/12/26 6:40 PM, Simon Josefsson wrote:
>
>> My conclusion is that it makes sense for many open source projects to
>> avoid the copyright year bump, and equally that it makes sense for many
>> free software projects to spend time on doing the copyright year bump.
>
> From a legal point of view we can only bump the copyright year if a
> substantial enough change was made in that year.

I don't think there is any general agreement or policy on that.

It is common to suggest that making a new public release is sufficient
reason to update the copyright year, even if 99% of the work is
identical with the last edition.  You will then get another year of
copyright protection for that aggregated edition.

Searching for "copyright year update for new publication" gives a number
of discussions on this (of varied quality).

Of course, people will arive at different trade-offs on this, and I
think it is hard or impossible to write any general guidelines on this.
It depends on the licenses involved and the intent/desires of the
copyright holder.

/Simon

> That is not a problem for cURL, which is actively developed, but it is
> less clear-cut if running an automated tool to import a new upstream
> version is already clearing the hurdle if no other changes are
> required.
>
> Bumping the copyright year without actually doing something that is
> copyrightable would likely weaken a legal case, even if old copyrights
> are not expiring soon.
>
>    Simon
>
>

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