On Sun, Aug 31, 2003 at 08:52:29PM -0700, Don Armstrong wrote: > > Luckily, we only have a few (one?) large components of Debian that are > under a 4-clause BSD license [OpenSSL]. I for one, will be glad when > gnutls completely supplants the use of openssl.
This may change, if ftpmasters accept netbsd-kernel-source-* packages once they've stabilized enough to be worth packaging. Conversely, however, I'm currently putting in a great deal of manual effort to hunt down holders of copyrights in the source tree that have a 4-clause license, try to convince them to relicense, and get those changes committed to the NetBSD core tree. So far, there are approximately 5000 fewer files (out of around 15,000; mostly pure UCB text that never got updated) with a 4-clause BSD license, if you consider all pending patches as well as those already confirmed and applied. Some large portion of the rest are held under the copyright of The NetBSD Foundation (rather than individual authors), and can be removed in one fell swoop if and when TNF officially decides to permit it. That question has been under discussion for many months, at this point, and for all I know may be discussed for many more, but it *is* at least under discussion (and some number of NetBSD developers that I contacted about other occurances have said they're refusing to assign copyright unless and until TNF switches to a 3-clause license). RMS left CC'ed largely because he might find it intriguing, given that NetBSD was the concrete example given in one of the origional arguments. -- Joel Baker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ,''`. Debian GNU NetBSD/i386 porter : :' : `. `' `-
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