> Markus Laire wrote:
>
> > Paul O'Malley wrote:
> > Your extract was not verbose enough to prove your case.
> > You should have started here:
> > ---
> > Upstream Author: Wietse Venema
> >
> > Copyright:
> >
> > Most of the files, fall under the following copyright, and are >
distributable
> > under the terms of the BSD license
(/usr/share/common-licenses/BSD):
> > * Copyright (c) 1983,1991 The Regents of the University of
California.
> > * All rights reserved.
> >
> > Some of the RPC code, is copyrighted by Sun Microsystems, and is
provided under the following terms:
> >
> > -----
> >
> > This implies that the code is part of a product which Wietse has
licensed.
> >
> > Licence is thus free!
>
> But Wietse hasn't licensed RPC code under any free license.
>
> The above text doesn't say that RPC code is licensed under BSD
license. Actually just the opposite. RPC code "is provided under the
following terms", and the "following terms" (see below) gives right to
distribute *only* for the user who developed the product or program, not
to anyone else.
The people maintaining gnewsense have said ok for this code/license, if
you think otherwise, get proof from sun that you are right !!!
If you happen to get a lawyer on a bad day and they agree with you - you
will have taken NFS out of every GNU/Linux Distribution - well done -
until then, you'll have to accept the better judgement of the people
that maintain this distribution.