Hi, Sorry to be late to the party; although I am surprised that the discussion of this topic did not persist beyond 24 hours...
On 10/10/11 00:02, Stefano Zacchiroli wrote: > From a philosophical point of view, there are essentially two stances we > can take: either DFSG should be applied to trademark licenses or they > should not (i.e. they should be applied only to copyright licenses). > > From a practical point of view we have more options. For instance, *if* > we decide that DFSG should not be applied to trademark licenses, we > might still want to limit what is acceptable in the archive in terms of > the extra burden that it poses on Debian procedures. My opinion (and IANADD) is that the DFSG should be taken as applying to copyright licences, and that Debian should develop additional guidelines as to what is acceptable in a trademark licence for Debian to use it. Furthermore, you should strongly discourage "licenses" which address both sets of rights, asking people to separate them into two documents or licensing statements. (One exception: if using the trademark in certain ways is necessary for the proper operation of the package, and either the copyright or the trademark licence purports to restrict those particular uses, the software should be considered DFSG non-free. This prevents the "cross-linking" in some way of the two fields of licensing.) So broadly, I agree with your approach, and would be happy to help with drafting the trademark license acceptability guidelines. I have had raw material for an essay "Trademarks and the Free Software Movement" sitting in one of my email folders for nearly 7 (!) years now, waiting for it to reach the top of my ToDo list... Gerv -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-project-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/j7jcch$b7p$1...@dough.gmane.org