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GNU is Not Unix

FSF Releases Draft of Version 1.2 of the GNU FDL 14

bkuhn writes: "The FSF has released a draft version 1.2 of the the GNU Free Documentation License for comment by the Free Software community. Comments should be directed to <fdl-comments@fsf.org>."
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FSF Releases Draft of Version 1.2 of the GNU FDL

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  • by OiBoy ( 22100 )
    From the FDL:

    "Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, but changing it is not allowed."

    I see a bit of a dichotomy here.

    • The GFDL is a GPL-style license, which means it's viral. You can't have a viral license if people are allowed to change the license after the fact. If you don't like GPL-style licenses, you can make your work public domain, or choose a different license.

      The whole point of a GPL-style license is to take away people's freedom. For example, there might be a hacked Perl interpreter linked into the software that runs your PDA, and you might never know it, because Perl's license gives the PDA manufacturer the freedom to change Perl, use the changed version, and not publish the changes. A GPL-style license doesn't give you the same freedom.

      Of course, "free" isn't necessarily the same as "good," as implicitly assumed by Stallman's rhetoric. I sometimes use the GFDL, because I want to take away certain freedoms from people who use use my books. For instance, I may not want them to have the freedom, which they would have under a BSD-style license, to use excerpts from my book in their own book, without making their book free-as-in-anything.

  • side-by-side diff (Score:3, Informative)

    by bcrowell ( 177657 ) on Thursday February 07, 2002 @06:31PM (#2970583) Homepage
    Here [lightandmatter.com] is a side-by-side diff. The main change seems to be that they've added some explicit discussion of no-warranty clauses. Not a momentous change, really -- does anyone really get sued because they gave away a book for free, and the book had a mistake in it???
    • by Pembers ( 250842 )

      Another difference appears to be that they've added restrictions on the lengths of Front-Cover and Back-Cover Texts (5 and 25 words, respectively).

      These limits seem a little arbitrary. Also, they might be inappropriate for languages other than English. Most European languages would be OK, but I gather that something like Chinese uses many short words. At the other extreme are languages that say as much in one long word as English says in a sentence (Inuit, I think, is one example). Even Latin gets by with about half the number of words in a sentence that English normally does.

      Could this cause problems, or am I just picking nits here?

      • No, it could very well be a problem. I can understand GNU wanting to limit the front and back texts, otherwise you could start including stuff that shouldn't be there (like an index). But five words is much too short for the front matter, and 25 words is much to short for the back.

        In my opinion, I think GNU is going overboard on their copyleft crusade. It fits works okay for technical documentation associated with copyleft software, but it falls down for a lot of other stuff.

        In my never humble opinion, just use the same license for the documentation as for the software. Make it all one package and license it as a whole. If it's good enough for the software it's good enough for its documentation.

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