On Wed, 2018-05-16 at 14:42 +0200, Jerome Kieffer wrote: > Hi all, > > Maybe I am not asking to the right people but you may redirect me to > the appropriate list within the debian community. > > Some facts: Nvidia changed the license agreement on the 21st of > december 2017 for their driver making it illegal to use these drivers > inside a datacenter except for crypto-currency mining, unless you use > them on tesla-class hardware. > > I doubt this is legal in most countries as it was common to purchase > servers with Titan-cards and those servers can no-more be used since > the beginning of the year (even if purchased under the former EULA). > > Debian registers all licenses and the "nvidia license" is referenced > for the non-free repository. I would be interested in debian's > official > point of view as the new EULA clearly looks incompatible with > open-source software. > > Thanks for your thought
Hi Jerome, Debian-Science can't give an "official" Debian point of view as such, but we can discuss questions like this. We also have the debian-legal mailing list to ask licence questions (though again, that's more for discussion than official pronouncement). My own opinion is that this change in licence agreement is not appropriate or necessary. It's none of nVidia's business in what configuration users install their video cards. Evidently they feel differently. My interpretation is that their legal advice is worried they might get sued if a datacentre using Titan cards were to catch fire and burn down. Though if that were the case then you'd think the sensible action would be to ban the use of those hardware cards in a datacentre, not the use of the software. Maybe they figure it too late the ban the hardware, its already there. The new versions of the software are the only thing they can control now. But as far as Debian goes, we already judged the nVidia licence to be non-free (though permitting distribution). This change in licence terms does not change that. Drew

