On Sun, Jul 13, 2003 at 03:59:00PM -0000, MJ Ray wrote: > You disagree that the documentation part of a GFDL-covered work is > acceptably licensed?
Yes. It is encumbered with invariant sections. That clearly doesn't meet DFSG#3, and it doesn't qualify for the exception in DFSG#4. > I do not talk about the work as a whole, which seems > clearly not to be. If it were _possible_ to just ignore the invariant sections when considering the documentation, then we wouldn't be having this discussion. Their stickiness is precisely the problem, since it encumbers documentation that would otherwise be free. > Related points that I consider interesting and relevant to what happens > next are: is there any legal basis for distinguishing programs from other > literary works? There seems to be; several European laws make specific exceptions for computer programs. They don't define "computer program", as far as I know. > From other electronically stored works? What about > fonts? Encoding tables? Is DFSG sufficiently general? If it's electronically (YM digitally?) stored, then I say it's software. I see no reason to make this word a synonym for "computer programs", and in practice I see people refer to a large variety of digitally stored data as "software". (For example, does the MirrorMagic package contain "software, documentation, sounds and graphics"? Or is the whole thing just "software"?) Richard Braakman