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Hello,
I have submitted the Falcon package for review and inclusion at
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=428603
I will clear the rpmlint report later today.
The Falcon Programming Language is released under FPLL: this is mainly
an Apache2 license modified to extend the openness of the license to
the embedding application and to the scripts. Here I am submitting the
license to fedora-legal for approval.
When I wrote the language, I searched around for a suitable license,
mainly looking at other programming languages as Python and Ruby. I
found there was too many gray areas about using the scripting languge
as a scripting engine in foreign applications, and also the byproduct
of the system (precompiled scripts) was left in a "undeclared state"
which I didn't like. Even the script themselves, which are written in
a certain language on which the copyright-copyleft extends, are often
left in an undeclared state by those licenses.
As I wanted more clarity and more explicit freedom for my users, I
wrote the FPLL thinking at the apllication writers and at the
applications embedding falcon as a scripting engine. Of all the open
source licenses I checked, APACHE 2 was giving the guarantees I wanted
both to Falcon and to their users, just it didn't cover "embedding"
and "scripts"; so I used it and just extended it to scripts and
embedding applications.
I have started the OSI registration process, in the sense that I have
asked for a legal advice of an accredited lawyer in my country, and I
am waiting its relation to submit it to OSI.
The license commentary (my intention) is here:
http://www.falconpl.org/?page_id=license_comment
and the text of the license is here:
http://www.falconpl.org/?page_id=license
I include the text of the two documents here below:
Dear Reader,
First of all, thanks for considering using The Falcon Language for
Your job, or to embed it into Your application, or to use it for any
other reason. The Falcon Programming Language License explains what
You are allowed to do with Falcon and what You are supposed (and
allowed) not to do. Since the legal jargon may be cryptic, You are
provided here with a little resume of the License. It is important
that You read and accept the License, as this resume hasn't any legal
valence, and is provided only for the reason to express clarifications
and examples that cannot find their place in the formal document.
The License grants You the rights to use the Source code of Falcon and
its various components in any way; You can study it, You can copy it,
You can modify it, and You can even sell it, but You can't change the
license under which it is distributed: even if You sell it, You have
to provide the customers with the source code of Falcon and to grant
them the same rights You have on it.
The License also grants Your copyrights and intellectual rights for
any modification or addition You may want to apply to Falcon. In case
or addition and modifications, the License binds You to provide the
user with the information that the original program, that is Falcon,
was modified by You and what are the changes or the additions that You
applied.
Also, even if You can freely distribute, or even charge a fee, for
Your derived work, You MUST apply the Falcon Programming Language
License to Your modifications, and distribute them under the same
terms. In other words, Your modifications, if made public, must be
provided or available in source code.
The license also grants You the right to embed Falcon in any
application. Here You are granted the right to pick the terms and
licenses You prefer, and to distribute Your embedding application
without providing its source code. Even if significant portions of
Falcon are in line functions, and even if You decide to statically
link Falcon in Your application, this doesn't make it a "Derivative
Work" of it: Your Embedding application is free to embed Falcon "as
is" as it wish, without any requirements in terms of source
distribution. You can also modify Falcon for Your specific needs and
THEN embed Your modified version; the modified version of Falcon is
under Falcon License, and must be made available in source code (or be
proposed as a Contribution to the Falcon Committee), but Your
Embedding application can still be distributed under Your preferred
terms. The License has only a requirement that is demanded on Your
Embedding application: You HAVE to state somewhere (in a place that
CAN possibly be seen by the average user) that You are embedding
Falcon and the reason for that. In example, You may state "ProgramX
uses the Falcon Programming Language to automatize the Gamma procedure".
About the scripts, which are more or less what a scripting language is
for, You are granted the right to apply the license You prefer. As
Falcon is also a script "compiler", You may even retain from
distributing the script sources, and apply closed-source license to
Your script-based application or to the scripts that are embedded in
Your embedding application. However, if You don't distribute the
script sources, You are again required to state somewhere in Your
documentation or where the user can read it that You are using
"Falcon", and more or less why You are doing it. For a pure Falcon
application, You can just state "This application is written in
Falcon". In example, if You use Falcon to drive a web site, and You
don't want Your site visitors to ever see Your scripts, You have to
put somewhere a reading like "Powered with Falcon"; doesn't have to be
a n-inch banner on Your home page, You may also have just a small
reading in a secondary page.
What You cannot do is to claim that any thing You learnt from Falcon
is Yours: especially, You are forbidden to patent any element that is
found in Falcon. Another thing that You can't do is to sell a Falcon
based product as if it were "completely" Yours, forgetting to cite,
even in a very small reading, the fact that Falcon is in. Finally, a
thing that the License prevents You from doing is to put the blame for
failures on Falcon: the product is provided as-is, without any
warranty. It's up to You to test if it is suitable to solve Your
problems, and if a Falcon based application can be sold and granted as
"working" to Your customers. If that application breaks, whether
there's a problem with Falcon or not, You can't issue any claim on the
Falcon contributors.
Be kind on the Open Source Community: they have already made a lot for
You even if You don't know them (and even if they don't know You).
Best regards,
Giancarlo Niccolai
Falcon Programming Language License
Version 1.0, February 2005
http://www.falconpl.org/?page_id=license
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The sendmail license (http://www.sendmail.org/ftp/LICENSE) is not
currently listed in the "Good licenses" list, nor is it listed on the
FSF "list of licenses" page. However, sendmail *is* listed in the FSF
directory of free software (http://directory.fsf.org/sendmail.html)
Please can the sendmail license be added to the good licenses list?
Cheers, Paul.
Hi there,
it was just brought to my attention that nessus-core, specifically the client
may have a license issue if build with ssl support:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=437474
Since I have no clue about these things it would be nice of someone could
elaborate a bit more on this, specifically if we need to take action and remove
it.
Regards,
Andreas
--
Andreas Bierfert, M.Sc. | http://awbsworld.de | GPG: C58CF1CB
andreas.bierfert(a)lowlatency.de | http://lowlatency.de | signed/encrypted
phone: +49 2402 102373 | cell: +49 173 5803043 | mail preferred
[This is a repost of a message which I incorrectly sent to
fedora-packaging list, so my apologies if you've seen it before.]
I'm trying to package a Unicode library which contains lots of
different "<some random NLS> to Unicode" mappings files.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=253564
I've got some questions:
(1) Codepage 932 is an MS extension to Shift JIS. The file that is
shipped in the source package is derived from this one:
http://unicode.org/Public/MAPPINGS/VENDORS/MICSFT/WINDOWS/CP932.TXT
Note that we also ship essentially the same set of mappings in other
Fedora packages, eg:
/usr/share/xemacs-21.5-b28/etc/unicode/unicode-consortium/CP932.TXT
/usr/share/cups/charmaps/windows-932.txt
There's no license information but it was my understanding (IANAL)
that simple lists of facts like this couldn't be monopolized in the
US.
(2) The package ships Unicode data with the license below. Is it OK?
http://www.unicode.org/Public/3.2-Update/UnicodeData-3.2.0.html#UCD_Terms
(3) The package contains locales from the IBM ICU project. The
license for this looks like BSD to me, so is this OK?
http://source.icu-project.org/repos/icu/icu/trunk/license.html
(4) Finally there is one file whose license is described like this:
The file allkey.txt [sic] is obtained from Unicode Consortium Web site.
Its copyright is owned by Unicode Consortium. Its use, reproduction,
distribution are permitted under the term of
http://www.unicode.org/copyright.html
where the link goes to a long-winded and confusing page. The file
itself is just a list of facts
(http://www.annexia.org/tmp/allkeys.txt)
Ancillary question:
(5) If it turns out that some files aren't safe to distribute, do I
need to remove them from the source tarball, and if so how? Do I have
to prepare my own tarball and host it too?
Rich.
--
Richard Jones, Emerging Technologies, Red Hat http://et.redhat.com/~rjones
virt-top is 'top' for virtual machines. Tiny program with many
powerful monitoring features, net stats, disk stats, logging, etc.
http://et.redhat.com/~rjones/virt-top
Hello legal team,
I would like to package GNU spacechart application [1], but I'm not sure
if we can ship their data files. Gnu Space Chart is a 3D star-mapping
program that uses data (not directly the catalogue [2], only set of data
from there) with this copyright notice:
##################################################################
Catalogues available at CDS contain scientific data distributed
for free, for a scientific usage. Only the expenses related to
copying and mailing are charged if relevant.
Companies including such data in their commercial products cannot
charge their clients for the data. Furthermore, users must be informed
of the origin of the data: this means an explicit reference to the
service
provided by the CDS and also to the original author(s) of each
catalogue.
##################################################################
Now, I'm not sure if we can ship it with Fedora, because even if someone
sell Fedora for money, they sell the program and not data directly.
However I don't know how the law looks on this problem.
Any ideas? Workarounds?
[1] http://www.gnu.org/software/spacechart/#download
[2] http://cdsweb.u-strasbg.fr/
Thanks,
--
Marek Mahut https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/SIGs/Astronomy/
Fedora Project http://www.jamendo.com/