Peter Simon's mail does contain a lot of allegations - I will refrain to clarify in the same length. I hope that quite some people on the Autoconf list know me well enough to assume that there had never been bad intentions whatsoever on my side. Peter has been contacting me on Sunday to ask about the redistribution of m4 macro files at ac-archive.sf.net that had been published before at autoconf-macro.cryp.to - calling it "his work". I hinted that the GPL does allow redistribution of GPL-protected work including others extensions - only to see me being accused of GPL-violation yesterday and without waiting for response he wrote a few hours later to the sourceforge staff requesting their intervention on the ac-archive.sf.net project. Technically, I noted him that the ac-archive.sf.net website had have multiple links to the cryp.to archive. The sf-net project is about the integration of mulitple sources with the cryp.to archive running as one among others - the cryp.to archive is a bit special here as it integrates again other peoples work. Since the html pages were already honouring the cryp.to source and the m4 files did never contain a hint back, I have decided to redistribute the README COPYING AUTHORS files from the cryp.to tarball as well in the update of today (ac-archive-macros-2006.1017.tar.bz2) in an attempt to comply with the alleged requirement (in his mail to sourceforge) to have something in there that "identifies me (i.e. Peter) as the compilation copyright owner". Plus, every single html page from a cryp.to macro carries now a hotlink back there. On another account, everyone is invited to partake in the sf-net autoconf macro archive. I have remade the build chain in python so that everyone can create the full website - the source repository is public at the sourceforge cvs. (btw, Peter has never published his build tools - the tarball is incomplete). As an extra of the refurnished ac-archive.sf.net (which is still not uptodate in quite a number of places) does contain unix manual pages generated from the macro files. The docbook intermediate xml might be used for other derivate work as well. Your choice. Have fun, everyone -- Guido P.S. the old tarball will be removed - I don't think it was bad but a new one is available anyway and I am always fine with lowering aggressiveness in this world. _______________________________________________ Autoconf mailing list Autoconf@xxxxxxx http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/autoconf