On Fri, 17 Mar 2006 21:41:29 +0400 olive wrote: > The greatest problem is that the GFDL is really badly written and > although I have always defended that it is free, it would be very > usefull if the FSF could one for all resolve these ambiguities. I doubt that this will ever happen, now that the Debian Project officially stated that these badly written clauses and ambiguities are acceptable... :-((( This GR resulted in a compromise where nobody wins: I'm really disappointed. GFDL'd works are *not* DFSG-free (even when they do not include any unmodifiable & unremovable part): a GR cannot magically change this fact (unless it modifies the DFSG themselves, which GR-2006-001 didn't). [...] > Some might argue that a court will read the GFDL in a more litteral > sense. I do not think that because it seems very obvious that the > copyright holder of a GFDL document don't want to restrict what you do > with your own copy. We cannot be sure (not even "reasonably sure"). I've seen every kind of awkward "free software supporters": many are perfectly fine with Invariant Sections (or even with Creative Commons non-commercial or no-derivative licenses), for instance. Before seeing those people aggressively defend such restrictions, I would have said: "Obviously, a free software supporter does *not* want to restrict modification (or commercial use) of his/her own work!". Now I'm not so sure anymore[1]. Likewise, I cannot be sure that someone who adopts the GFDL doesn't want to restrict what I can do with my own private copy of his/her work... [1] Well, just to nitpick: the sentence still holds for *true* free software supporters, but true free software supporters *don't* release works under the GFDL... -- :-( This Universe is buggy! Where's the Creator's BTS? ;-) ...................................................................... Francesco Poli GnuPG Key ID = DD6DFCF4 Key fingerprint = C979 F34B 27CE 5CD8 DC12 31B5 78F4 279B DD6D FCF4
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