On Fri, Feb 01, 2013 at 02:04:26AM +0100, Jérémy Lal wrote:
> To be practical, are these files all right to be listed
> as 'public-domain' in debian/copyright :
>
> * without copyright notice
Not public domain. Copyrighted without license. If the author hasn't stated
anything, then the work is
On Fri, Feb 01, 2013 at 02:04:26AM +0100, Jérémy Lal wrote:
> On 01/02/2013 01:25, Don Armstrong wrote:
> > On Fri, 01 Feb 2013, Jérémy Lal wrote:
> >> My issue is that i don't understand how public domain is DFSG,
> > If a work can actually be placed into the public domain
> Does this mean there
On 01/02/2013 01:25, Don Armstrong wrote:
> On Fri, 01 Feb 2013, Jérémy Lal wrote:
>> My issue is that i don't understand how public domain is DFSG,
>
> If a work can actually be placed into the public domain
Does this mean there are cases where the work cannot actually
be placed into the public
On Thu, Jan 31, 2013 at 04:25:21PM -0800, Don Armstrong wrote:
> On Fri, 01 Feb 2013, Jérémy Lal wrote:
> > My issue is that i don't understand how public domain is DFSG,
>
> If a work can actually be placed into the public domain, then that
> usually means that it has no copyright, and therefore
On Fri, 01 Feb 2013, Jérémy Lal wrote:
> My issue is that i don't understand how public domain is DFSG,
If a work can actually be placed into the public domain, then that
usually means that it has no copyright, and therefore automatically
satisfies the DFSG so long as there is source.
In countrie
On 31/01/2013 23:16, Ben Finney wrote:
> Jérémy Lal writes:
>
>> Will you still be uploading to main, if one day it becomes illegal
>> in your own country ?
>
> Are you taking a poll? Or is there particular interest in MJ Ray's
> answer?
No.
> What is the actual issue you're addressing with st
Jérémy Lal writes:
> Will you still be uploading to main, if one day it becomes illegal
> in your own country ?
Are you taking a poll? Or is there particular interest in MJ Ray's
answer?
What is the actual issue you're addressing with starting this thread?
--
\ “Think for yourselves and
On 31/01/2013 19:45, MJ Ray wrote:
> Jérémy.
>> Public domain is not a license, its meaning depends
>> on the country you're in. What if that country applies
>> laws that violate DFSG ?
>>
>> Please enlighten me.
>
> Why? Does this affect any software that you're packaging?
Not particularly. Som
Jérémy.
> Public domain is not a license, its meaning depends
> on the country you're in. What if that country applies
> laws that violate DFSG ?
>
> Please enlighten me.
Why? Does this affect any software that you're packaging?
Short answer: any software in that country is not free software, b
http://opensource.org/faq#public-domain
http://opensource.org/faq#cc0
Public domain is not a license, its meaning depends
on the country you're in. What if that country applies
laws that violate DFSG ?
Please enlighten me.
Jérémy.
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