[Date Prev][Date Next] [Thread Prev][Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]

Re: non-free and users?



Raul Miller wrote:

One can package software with most restrictive license you can imagine,
but this can not produce any ethical problem, until it will be
*distributed*. If distribution is not performed, it can not produce
described non-ethical situations, neither #1 nor #2.


In your example here, it's the license which is the potential problem,
not the software.  The phrase "until it will be distributed" makes that
very obvious.

I will try to separate things. There can be two cases:

1. 'A' produces software and distributes with non-free license. Debian
does not produce software with non-free licenses. It is not interesting
case for us now.

2. Debian gets program from 'A' with non-free license and distributes
it. In this case all that situations which will happen around programs
distributed by Debian are consequences of such a chain:

'A' produces and _distributes_ _under_ _non-free_ _license_ to Debian - Debian _distributes_ _under_ _non-free_ _license_ to user.

It is not correct to say that the problem is in license, or the problem is in distribution.

The problem is in *distribution* *with* *non-free* *license*. License have no meaning without distribution.
--
Best regards, Sergey Spiridonov




Reply to: