Scripsit [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Nathanael Nerode) I ran over Nathanael's list of bugs to provide an independent assessment from a d-l point of view; here are my findings. Note that some of the activity seems to be in response to pings from NN earlier today.
> 224913: gpsdrive Closed by upload earlier today. > 229720: icecast2 There is some discussion in the bug. It seems to be free except for a couple of win32 source files (which can presumably be left out of the orig.tar.gz without ill effects). The rest of the problem seems to consist of files that do not contain individual copyright notices. If those files are genuinely written by the same author as the one who put them beside a copy of the GPL, I think we can safely work from the fact that the *work*, as a whole, has an appropriate copyright notice and license. > 227793: libpgeasy Missing explicit license notice in upstream source, maintainer is in contact with upstream about fixing. > 229747: mirrormagic Maintainer promised earlier today to talk to upstream about the problems. > 220054: smlnj > -- no source! Closed earlier today. > 211644: ssh > -- this one was really close to being solved; more people need to bug > Matthew Vernon about this. Yes. > 223587: vcdimager > -- sounds like it's basically fixed; I sent a nag Yes. > 212766: vlc > -- untouched since Sept. -- needs repackaging Some upstream author disclaims liability for possible patent problems, which is reasonable. The "needs repacking" is not a legal problem, if the licenses in question are compatible (and if they are, repackaging will not solve the problem). > 225002: xephem > -- star catalog is undistributable I agree that there is a problem, but speculate that there must be star catalogs which are copyright-free due to the "works by U.S. Government" doctrine. Don't institutional American starwatchers get federal money to do what they do? > Also, how quickly should undistributable packages be removed from > Debian? I'm tempted to file ftp.debian.org bugs *immediately* at > *critical* severity, since these leave Debian nastily open to > lawsuits. I think debian-legal usually advocates a "wait-and-see" approach in cases where it seems likely that the copyright holder is just stating benign intentions in confused and/or contradictory terms, *and* the Debian maintainer has a working dialogue with said copyright holder. On the other hand, in case of direct license incompabilities (for example: Upstream reuses GPLed source but restricts his own work above and beyond what GPL does), we should remove the package immediately, both due to the lawsuit risk, and out of respect for the authors of the original GPL code. -- Henning Makholm "We can hope that this serious deficiency will be remedied in the final version of BibTeX, 1.0, which is expected to appear when the LaTeX 3.0 development is completed."