On Saturday 11 June 2005 04:58 pm, Wei Mingzhi wrote: > It's not a free software license because of this one. > > 4. Initial Developer as Maintainer of Source Code > The Initial Developer will be acting as the > maintainer of the Source Code. You must notify the > Initial Developer of any modification which You create > or to which You contribute, except for internal > development and practice, via an electronic mail > message sent to [EMAIL PROTECTED] The Initial > Developer may provide an Electronic Distribution > mechnism for the Modification to be made available. > > This goes against the Freedom 3 of the FSF's free > software defination, and the 3rd clause of the Debian > Free software Guidelines.
How? Leaving FSF's Freedom 3 out of the picture (unless Debian adopted them at some time), I don't see how requiring the contribution of the modification back to source violates Clause 3 of the DFSG: "The license must allow modifications and derived works, and must allow them to be distributed under the same terms as the license of the original software." The license allows modification and derived works, and it allows them to be distributed under the same terms as the license. It doesn't say anything about not requiring contribution. -Sean -- Sean Kellogg 2nd Year - University of Washington School of Law GPSS Senator - Student Bar Association Editor-at-Large - National ACS Blog [http://www.acsblog.org] w: http://probonogeek.blogspot.com So, let go ...Jump in ...Oh well, what you waiting for? ...it's all right ...'Cause there's beauty in the breakdown