On Sat, Jul 15, 2006 at 08:59:34PM -0500, Patrick W. Barnes wrote: > > It says "Texts contributed after 2006-02-19 or by members of the > > EditGroup are the licensed under the terms of the Open Publication > > License v1.0 without options, unless otherwise noted." And it does not > > say _who_ can otherwise note. While I don't personally agree with this > > specific instance, I also don't see where licensing a page under a > > different license is not allowed. The wording is a bit ambiguous. > The "unless otherwise noted" is intended to allow the Board, assorted > committees, etc. to handle special cases where the OPL cannot apply, such > as pages where the ACLs have been loosened to allow anyone to contribute > without granting a copyright license. It is not a manner for contributors > to circumvent our licensing requirements. The Fedora Project holds a You must admit it is ambiguous. Or actually, I'm inclined to say "doesn't seem ambigous at all, but rather clearly states that some content may be licensed differently". > copyright license for anything that is submitted by a contributor with a > signed CLA. Using the power of that copyright license, the Fedora Project > applies the OPL without options to documentation and website > contributions. That right is not revocable. Unless I'm misunderstanding, the copyright license wording is not so broad as that. Specifically, it says: 2. Contributor Grant of License. You hereby grant to Red Hat, Inc., on behalf of the Project, and to recipients of software distributed by the Project: (a) a perpetual, non-exclusive, worldwide, fully paid-up, royalty free, irrevocable copyright license to reproduce, prepare derivative works of, publicly display, publicly perform, sublicense, and distribute your Contribution and such derivative works; and, [... other, patent-related stuff ...] While Red Hat can sublicense under this grant, it doesn't seem to say "may completely relicense". As a bystander here, it really seems like you are taking an unnecessarily antagonistic tone in this conversation. Rather than being so declarative, can't maybe something be worked out in a civilized way? -- Matthew Miller mattdm@xxxxxxxxxx <http://mattdm.org/> Boston University Linux ------> <http://linux.bu.edu/> -- fedora-extras-list mailing list fedora-extras-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-extras-list