@Schilly

If the-unfriendly-who-was-not-named made a bogus claim about licensing but then 
(as you pointed out) went to the dark side of the law by actually breaking your 
copyright, isn't it simpler to just SUE his @$$ and then get Debian fixed ?
(For the downstream distros that are still reluctant, such as Ubuntu, you could 
just point them to the result of the lawsuit or even to the preliminary 
paperwork and also the the ppa repositories so they can switch even before 
Debian does.)

I know it sounds harsh, it is, but any person making people burn a lot of 
coasters and a lot of time just for a lousy patch (and possibly sent some users 
back to windoze) can go to hеll in my book and .... burn all he wants with all 
the patches he wants.
And since the closest thing to hell is the justice systsem, there's the 
suggestion above.

And I also realise that you already worked a LOT on this (and I'm hoping
you continue to do so for newer optical drives like BD-R etc if you
haven't already done so), but you're the only one who can sue the-
unfriendly-who-was-not-named. If you don't have time, see if any
association could do it pro bono on your behalf (and with your proper
authorization, of course).

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/213215

Title:
  Please include original cdrecord (cdrtools) package in Ubuntu

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