Replying to Dmitry Butskoy: > The using of software in business and production environment can be a > subject for legislative regulation. It can lead to some legal troubles > of using of distributions like Fedora. Such an interesting thread and I almost missed it! First, what is teh License. Not a single entity who are now involved in IP law enforcement in Russia understands this. And, despite what Alan said about learning, I don't see how it can be improved. The situation will be only worse. But then, how to deal with it. Typical scenario starts when teh police comes and asks for the licenses. The only thing we need to do here is to show them proof of purchase or the printed licenses when someone with rights grants you permission to use the software. In other words, you, as Dmitry Butskoy, can comply to Fedora' EULA and GPL by redistributing entire distribution to your organization for free. Print the GPL, print the russian translation (non-official/for info purposes only), sign, show. This will be enough - in cases They haven't "told" to shutdown your business specifically. -- Paul P 'Stingray' Komkoff Jr // http://stingr.net/key <- my pgp key This message represents the official view of the voices in my head -- fedora-devel-list mailing list fedora-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-devel-list