The debian-private mailing list leak, part 1. Volunteers have complained about Blackmail. Lynchings. Character assassination. Defamation. Cyberbullying. Volunteers who gave many years of their lives are picked out at random for cruel social experiments. The former DPL's girlfriend Molly de Blanc is given volunteers to experiment on for her crazy talks. These volunteers never consented to be used like lab rats. We don't either. debian-private can no longer be a safe space for the cabal. Let these monsters have nowhere to hide. Volunteers are not disposable. We stand with the victims.
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Results of "social contract" survey
31 people voted (I'll use debian-vote instead of debian-private next time,
and make the open period for voting longer).
YES: 24
NO: 4
ABSTAIN: 3
More than 2/3 voted "yes". Let's continue the discussion on the text. Is
it necessary for me to hold a fine-resolution vote on each paragraph?
Here is the current text.
Thanks
Bruce
We are Software In The Public Interest, a non-profit organization and
producers of the Debian GNU/Linux system. This is the "social contract"
we offer to the free software community.
We promise to keep our GNU/Linux system entirely free software.
As there are many implementations of free software, we include the
guidelines we use to determine if software is "free" below. We will
support our users who develop and run non-free software on Debian, but
we will never make the system depend on an item of non-free software.
|We will contribute to the free software world. When we write new
|components of the Debian system, we will license them as free software.
We will make the best free-software system we can, so that free software
will be widely distributed and easily used. We will feed back bug-fixes,
improvements, user requests etc. to the "upstream" authors of software
included in our system. We will keep a publically accessible bug-tracking
system to assist in this.
We will be guided by the needs of our users and the free-software
community. We will place their interests first in our priorities.
The Debian Free Software Guidelines
1. The software may be redistributed by anyone. The license for the
software must allow modifications and derived works, and must allow
them to be distributed under the same terms as the license of the
original software. If the license restricts a source file from being
distributed in modified form, it must allow "patch files" to be
distributed with the source for the explicit purpose of modifying it
at build time. The license may require derived works to carry a
different name than the original software.
|2. The license may not restrict any party from selling or giving
| away the software as a component of an aggregate software distribution
| containing programs from several different sources. The license may not
| require a royalty or other fee for such sale.
3. The license must not discriminate against any person or group of
persons unless their use would violate a law of the country from
which the software is distributed.
4. The license must not restrict anyone from making use of the program
in a specific field of endeavor where such use would not violate the
laws of the country from which the software is distributed. For example,
it may not restrict the program from being used in a business, or from
being used for genetic research.
5. The program must include source code, and must allow distribution in
source as well as binary form.
6. The rights attached to the program must apply to all to whom the
program is redistributed without the need for execution of an
additional license by those parties.
7. The rights attached to the program must not depend on the program's
being part of a Debian system. If a person extracts the program from
Debian and uses it or distributes it without Debian, that person and
any people to whom the program is redistributed should have the same
rights as those that are granted in conjunction with the Debian system.
8. The license must not place restrictions on other software packages that
are distributed on the same software medium. For example, the license
must not insist that all other programs distributed with it must be
free software.
The "GPL", "BSD", and "Artistic" licenses are examples of licenses that we
consider "free".
--
Bruce Perens K6BP Bruce@Pixar.com 510-215-3502
Finger bruce@master.Debian.org for PGP public key.
PGP fingerprint = 88 6A 15 D0 65 D4 A3 A6 1F 89 6A 76 95 24 87 B3
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