Re: pine in other distributions?

1999-09-29 Thread Radovan Garabik
On Tue, Sep 28, 1999 at 01:55:47PM -0700, Nick Moffitt wrote:
...

> 
> From http://linuxmafia.com/debian/tips (and based on some
> suggestions by yours truly):
> 
> pico can be emulated by a symbolic link to the simple editor "ae",
> which is really very close to pico:
> 
>cd /usr/local/bin
>ln -s ../../../bin/ae   pico

isn't it better to use jpico? (it is joe with pico keybindings, and comes
quite close)


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Re: pine in other distributions?

1999-09-29 Thread Jeff Teunissen
Piotr Roszatycki wrote:
> 
> On Tue, 28 Sep 1999, Johnie Ingram wrote:
> 
> > David> Redistribution of binary versions is further constrained by
> > David> license agreements for incorporated libraries from third
> > David> parties, e.g. LDAP, GSSAPI.
> >
> > Although the above trademark and copyright restrictions do not
> > convey the right to redistribute derivative works, the University
> > of Washington encourages unrestricted distribution of patch files
> > which can be applied to the University of Washington Pine
> > distribution.
> >
> > Did something change?  Have they seen the Light?
> 
> Is it possible to redistribute modified binaries?

"...do not convey the right to redistribute derivative works" -- any and
all modifications result in a derivative work.

You can make local versions, you just can't give them to anyone else
unless it's in the form of a patch.

-- 
| Jeff Teunissen -- President, Dusk To Dawn Computing -- [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Re: pine in other distributions?

1999-09-29 Thread Antti-Juhani Kaijanaho
On Wed, Sep 29, 1999 at 01:18:43AM +0200, David Weinehall wrote:
> Furthermore, there is NO clause explicitly forbidding distribution of
> modified versions

This is irrelevant.  What matters is whether we are explicitly *allowed*
to distribute.

Copyright defaults to "all rights reserved".

-- 
%%% Antti-Juhani Kaijanaho % [EMAIL PROTECTED] % http://www.iki.fi/gaia/ %%%

  ""
 (John Cage)



Re: pine in other distributions?

1999-09-29 Thread Raul Miller
On Wed, Sep 29, 1999 at 01:18:43AM +0200, David Weinehall wrote:
> I suggest one of the guys on Debian-legal makes contact with UW and asks
> for their consent to distribute a Pine vx.yDebian binary. I do believe
> them to be pretty reasonable.

Or you could.

-- 
Raul

P.S. you made this suggestion on debian-devel, not debian-legal.



Re: pine in other distributions?

1999-09-29 Thread Joseph Carter
On Tue, Sep 28, 1999 at 06:04:21PM -0400, Johnie Ingram wrote:
> David> Redistribution of binary versions is further constrained by
> David> license agreements for incorporated libraries from third
> David> parties, e.g. LDAP, GSSAPI.
> 
> Hm, what happened to this text:
> 
> Although the above trademark and copyright restrictions do not convey
> the right to redistribute derivative works, the University of
> Washington encourages unrestricted distribution of patch files which
> can be applied to the University of Washington Pine distribution.
> 
> Did something change?  Have they seen the Light?

They have made it so at this point you can distribute pine freely if you
mark derived versions as such on CDs.  Note they SPECIFICALLY say that you
can do it on CDs.  They never say you can do it elsewhere such as ftp,
http, magnetic tape, zip disks, et al.  This is clearly a stupid oversight
on their part.  It could be fixed if someone had the time to approach
them.  (I no longer do.)

-- 
Joseph Carter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Debian GNU/Linux developer
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Re: pine in other distributions?

1999-09-28 Thread David Weinehall
On Wed, 29 Sep 1999, Thomas Schoepf wrote:

> On Tue, 28 Sep 1999, David Weinehall wrote:
> 
> > Thus we are free to distribute even a patched Pine,
> 
> No! Anyone is allowed to _locally_ modify Pine, but there's no statement
> about distributing such modified versions. And "Redistribution of this
> release is permitted as follows [...]" of course only covers "this
> release" as provided from U. of Washington.

As it stands now, we don't even distribute a binary Pine at all, if
I'm not all incorrect, only the sources for (the outdated) Pine 3.96.

Furthermore, there is NO clause explicitly forbidding distribution of
modified versions; the only clause that mentions patches binaries is the
one concerning Local modification.

I suggest one of the guys on Debian-legal makes contact with UW and asks
for their consent to distribute a Pine vx.yDebian binary. I do believe
them to be pretty reasonable.

> > We'll still have to keep it in the non-free area, of course, as it's a
> > BSD-style license, but...
> 
> When did the BSD license change to non-free? From the Debian Policy
> section 2.1.1.:
> 
>  Example Licenses
>   The ``GPL,'' ``BSD,'' and ``Artistic'' licenses are examples of
>   licenses that we consider _free_.

Ok... Sorry, I guess that was personal disliking of the BSD-license
biasing my statement. :^/

/David Weinehall
  _ _ 
 // David Weinehall <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> /> Northern lights wander  \\
//  Project MCA Linux hacker//  Dance across the winter sky // 
\>  http://www.acc.umu.se/~tao/

Re: pine in other distributions?

1999-09-28 Thread Thomas Schoepf
On Tue, 28 Sep 1999, David Weinehall wrote:

> Thus we are free to distribute even a patched Pine,

No! Anyone is allowed to _locally_ modify Pine, but there's no statement
about distributing such modified versions. And "Redistribution of this
release is permitted as follows [...]" of course only covers "this
release" as provided from U. of Washington.

> We'll still have to keep it in the non-free area, of course, as it's a
> BSD-style license, but...

When did the BSD license change to non-free? From the Debian Policy
section 2.1.1.:

 Example Licenses
  The ``GPL,'' ``BSD,'' and ``Artistic'' licenses are examples of
  licenses that we consider _free_.


Thomas
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Re: pine in other distributions?

1999-09-28 Thread Johnie Ingram
"David" == David Weinehall <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

David>  On Tue, 28 Sep 1999, Nick Moffitt wrote:

David> Redistribution of binary versions is further constrained by
David> license agreements for incorporated libraries from third
David> parties, e.g. LDAP, GSSAPI.

Hm, what happened to this text:

Although the above trademark and copyright restrictions do not convey
the right to redistribute derivative works, the University of
Washington encourages unrestricted distribution of patch files which
can be applied to the University of Washington Pine distribution.

Did something change?  Have they seen the Light?

netgod




<_Anarchy_> Argh.. who's handing out the paper bags  8)



Re: pine in other distributions?

1999-09-28 Thread David Weinehall
On Tue, 28 Sep 1999, Nick Moffitt wrote:

> Quoting Piotr Roszatycki:
> > BTW, other pine's version is a part of official RedHat distribution,
> > but I don't know is it legal?
> > 
> > Will the pine return back to distribution?
> > Well, this is the mostly used mailer by my users (and me).
> 
> From http://linuxmafia.com/debian/tips (and based on some
> suggestions by yours truly):
> 
> 
> pine/pico:
> 
> Debian does not by default install "non-free" packages -- those under
> restrictive software licences (although many are provided and
> available for installation).  If you are a user of the "pine" e-mail
> client or the "pico" text editor that pine provides, please be aware
> that pine is non-free and therefore is not a default installation
> item.  
> 
> The U. of Washington's licence forbids distribution of pine/pico in
> binary form.  This restriction is routinely violated by many GNU/Linux
> distributions, but not by Debian.  (U. of Washington is aware of this
> licencing problem, but elects not to fix it.)  You can thus install
> pine and pico (in Debian) by installing the pine source-code package
> and then compiling the programs.

This is incorrect.

I quote:

Pine and Pico are registered trademarks of the University of Washington.
No commercial use of these trademarks may be made without prior written
permission of the University of Washington. 

Pine, Pico, and Pilot software and its included text are Copyright
1989-1999 by the University of Washington. 

Use of Pine/Pico/Pilot: You may compile and execute these programs for any
purpose, including commercial, without paying anything to the University
of Washington, provided that the legal notices are maintained intact
and honored. 

Local modification of this release is permitted as follows, or by mutual
agreement: In order to reduce confusion and facilitate debugging, we
request that locally modified versions be denoted by appending the letter
"L" to the current version number, and that the local changes be
enumerated in the integral release notes and associated documentation.

Redistribution of this release is permitted as follows, or by mutual
agreement: (a) In free-of-charge or at-cost distributions by non-profit
concerns; (b) In free-of-charge distributions by for-profit concerns; (c)
Inclusion in a CD-ROM collection of free-of-charge, shareware, or
non-proprietary software for which a fee may be charged for the packaged
distribution.

Redistribution of binary versions is further constrained by license
agreements for incorporated libraries from third parties, e.g. LDAP,
GSSAPI. 

The University of Washington encourages unrestricted distribution of
individual patches to the Pine system. By "patches" we mean "difference"
files that can be applied to the University of Washington Pine source
distribution in order to accomplish bug fixes, minor enhancements, or
adaptation to new operating systems. Submission of these patches to
University of Washington for possible inclusion in future Pine versions is
also encouraged.

[legal blurp with disclaimers concerning functionality stripped]

End of Quote


Thus we are free to distribute even a patched Pine, as long as we apply an
L at the end of the version#. Not too big a sacrifice, huh? We'll still
have to keep it in the non-free area, of course, as it's a BSD-style
license, but...

I'd love to see Pine 4.10 (in a Debian-modified state that has the pretty
colours patch + a fix for the VERY annoying bug that removes backslashes
from signatures)


/David Weinehall
  _ _ 
 // David Weinehall <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> /> Northern lights wander  \\
//  Project MCA Linux hacker//  Dance across the winter sky // 
\>  http://www.acc.umu.se/~tao/

Re: pine in other distributions?

1999-09-28 Thread David Bristel
You may have noticed that the other distributions also have KDE included in
them.  Because of the license "flaw", Debian does not allow KDE in main.  Redhat
and others include it because there is little chance of legal action against
them for this inclusion.  The same applies here, Redhat seems to include as many
good packages as it can, but will also ignore any potential legal issues if the
risk of a lawsuit is low.  From a business standpoint, this is good behavior,
but doesn't speak very highly of the morals of those who select what goes into
their distributions. 

Dave Bristel

On Tue, 28 Sep 1999, Piotr Roszatycki wrote:

> Date: Tue, 28 Sep 1999 22:48:08 +0200 (CEST)
> From: Piotr Roszatycki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: Debian Development Mailing List 
> Subject: pine in other distributions?
> Resent-Date: 28 Sep 1999 20:48:12 -
> Resent-From: debian-devel@lists.debian.org
> Resent-cc: recipient list not shown: ;
> 
> I'm a little suprised. I found pine package in redhat-contrib which
> has a few additional patches. The most interesting is 
> pine4.10-qtcolor-0.1.patch. 
> 
> pine.README.colours:
> 
> ---
> To turn on the "pretty colours" patch set the PINECOL environment variable to 
> true.
> 
> 08/02/99
> Simon Liddington <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> ---
> 
> BTW, other pine's version is a part of official RedHat distribution, but
> I don't know is it legal?
> 
> Will the pine return back to distribution?
> Well, this is the mostly used mailer by my users (and me).
> 
> -- 
> 
> Piotr "Dexter" Roszatycki
> mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 
> 
> -- 
> To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 



Re: pine in other distributions?

1999-09-28 Thread Nick Moffitt
Quoting Piotr Roszatycki:
> BTW, other pine's version is a part of official RedHat distribution,
> but I don't know is it legal?
> 
> Will the pine return back to distribution?
> Well, this is the mostly used mailer by my users (and me).

From http://linuxmafia.com/debian/tips (and based on some
suggestions by yours truly):


pine/pico:

Debian does not by default install "non-free" packages -- those under
restrictive software licences (although many are provided and
available for installation).  If you are a user of the "pine" e-mail
client or the "pico" text editor that pine provides, please be aware
that pine is non-free and therefore is not a default installation
item.  

The U. of Washington's licence forbids distribution of pine/pico in
binary form.  This restriction is routinely violated by many GNU/Linux
distributions, but not by Debian.  (U. of Washington is aware of this
licencing problem, but elects not to fix it.)  You can thus install
pine and pico (in Debian) by installing the pine source-code package
and then compiling the programs.

However, there's a better alternative.  Just put the following script
in /usr/local/bin as "pine", and chmod it to 755 (executable):

   #!/bin/sh
   /usr/bin/mutt -F /usr/doc/mutt/examples/Pine.rc

pico can be emulated by a symbolic link to the simple editor "ae",
which is really very close to pico:

   cd /usr/local/bin
   ln -s ../../../bin/ae   pico

-- 
((lambda (x) (list x (list (quote quote) x)))
(quote (lambda (x) (list x (list (quote quote) x)
-- A LISP quine written by Seth David Schoen
+++ath



Re: pine in other distributions

1998-10-06 Thread Kikutani Makoto
On Mon, Oct 05, 1998 at 11:31:59AM -0700,
Joseph Carter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> > According to the past pine discussions, it seemed that Pine must be 
> > distributed with its source. Is this correct ?
> > I couldn't read such restriction directly from Pine's CPYRIGHT.
> > The reason why I'm asking this is that the company is distributing
> > (not selling) binary only CDs.
> 
> No, we can't distribute modified pine binaries and the unmodified ones break
> policy and have bugs and lack features like maildir..

Now I understand. Thank you.

-- 
Kikutani, Makoto  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Linux related only)



Re: pine in other distributions

1998-10-05 Thread Joseph Carter
On Sun, Oct 04, 1998 at 04:20:20PM -0400, Kikutani Makoto wrote:
> I see. 
> 
> According to the past pine discussions, it seemed that Pine must be 
> distributed with its source. Is this correct ?
> I couldn't read such restriction directly from Pine's CPYRIGHT.
> The reason why I'm asking this is that the company is distributing
> (not selling) binary only CDs.

No, we can't distribute modified pine binaries and the unmodified ones break
policy and have bugs and lack features like maildir..


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Re: pine in other distributions

1998-10-05 Thread Joseph Carter
On Sun, Oct 04, 1998 at 11:34:18AM -0400, Kikutani Makoto wrote:
> I'm sorry, Pine again (and again and...).
> 
> Does anybody know if other distributions (RedHat, slack...)
> have Pine package ?

yes.


> If they have it, I assume their license policy is not hard as Debian.

Either they break the pine license or they distribute pine as compiled by
pristine source, known bugs and all.  Debian applies bugfixes and the
license which accompanies pine---not Debian's restrictions but UW's---keeps
pine out of even non-free.  =< Complain to UW about this if you like, but I
suspect you'll be talking to a brick wall there.


> I know one Japanese company is selling Linux CDs which contain
> a Japanese version of Pine. 
> In fact, the company is PHT Japan. Strictly speaking, their distribution
> isn't RedHat, but almost the same type distribution using RPM.
> 
> makoto
> 
> -- 
> Kikutani, Makoto  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>   [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Linux related only)
> 
> 
> --  
> To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 
> 
> 


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Re: pine in other distributions

1998-10-04 Thread Martin Schulze
Kikutani Makoto wrote:
> On Sun, Oct 04, 1998 at 05:52:47PM +0200,
> Martin Schulze <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 
> > > Does anybody know if other distributions (RedHat, slack...)
> > > have Pine package ?
> > 
> > They have.
> > 
> > > If they have it, I assume their license policy is not hard as Debian.
> > 
> > Indeed.  Debian is know for its maximum "pickyness" wrt copyrights
> > and licenses.
> > 
> > There is a pine-src package which will build a local pine.deb.
> 
> I see. 
> 
> According to the past pine discussions, it seemed that Pine must be 
> distributed with its source. Is this correct ?

I haven't looked at the copyright yet since pine is out of interest
for me.  From what I saw on the lists the copyrights fails at permitting
us to distribute (modified) binaries.  Generally speaking all .deb
files contain *modified* binaries.  That's why there is only a source
package.

Regards,

Joey

-- 
Unable to locate coffee, operator halted.  -- Stefan Farsch



Re: pine in other distributions

1998-10-04 Thread Kikutani Makoto
On Sun, Oct 04, 1998 at 05:52:47PM +0200,
Martin Schulze <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> > Does anybody know if other distributions (RedHat, slack...)
> > have Pine package ?
> 
> They have.
> 
> > If they have it, I assume their license policy is not hard as Debian.
> 
> Indeed.  Debian is know for its maximum "pickyness" wrt copyrights
> and licenses.
> 
> There is a pine-src package which will build a local pine.deb.

I see. 

According to the past pine discussions, it seemed that Pine must be 
distributed with its source. Is this correct ?
I couldn't read such restriction directly from Pine's CPYRIGHT.
The reason why I'm asking this is that the company is distributing
(not selling) binary only CDs.

makoto

-- 
Kikutani, Makoto  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Linux related only)



Re: pine in other distributions

1998-10-04 Thread Martin Schulze
Kikutani Makoto wrote:
> I'm sorry, Pine again (and again and...).
> 
> Does anybody know if other distributions (RedHat, slack...)
> have Pine package ?

They have.

> If they have it, I assume their license policy is not hard as Debian.

Indeed.  Debian is know for its maximum "pickyness" wrt copyrights
and licenses.

There is a pine-src package which will build a local pine.deb.

Regards,

Joey

-- 
Unable to locate coffee, operator halted.  -- Stefan Farsch