> Neither of those two documents say that we will keep all postings on > the archives, or that we will remove them, they just say that we will > if we want to.
Ummm... All emails sent to the lists are distributed both to the list subscribers and copied to the public archive, for people to browse or search without the need to be subscribed. and Obviously the author still owns the copyright to the content of these emails that they have written. However, that does not mean that the Debian Project is under obligation to remove them from a list archive once published. Several legal counsels have reviewed this stance and confirmed it is correct. seem to address your doubts... > And in the case of a third party forwarding a message without > permission, this bit doesn't even apply: > > > By sending an email to such a public forum, you agree to public > > distribution of your article. All mails sent to any of our mailing > > lists (and to the bug tracking system) will be publically distributed > > and archived in our mailing list archives. > > And what happens if I find your home address, and telephone number or > other address you don't want published, and I stick it on a debian > list? Should it stay there? I would still apply the second paragraph I just re-quoted - We are not under obligation to remove it. Now, if someone posted a list of valid WinXP license numbers to our lists, the listmasters would probably delete it. And if someone defamates you, publishes your personal information or something similar, you can _ask_ the listmasters to remove that from the archive. Of course, they will apply their personal criteria in order to do so, and they will not be able to remove it from external archiving sites. I don't think we need to document things that happen on a per-case basis. Greetings, -- Gunnar Wolf - [EMAIL PROTECTED] - (+52-55)5630-9700 ext. 1366 PGP key 1024D/8BB527AF 2001-10-23 Fingerprint: 0C79 D2D1 2C4E 9CE4 5973 F800 D80E F35A 8BB5 27AF