Hi. Currently cervisia is licensed under the QPL. As the maintainer of kdesdk in debian, I am unfortunately faced with having to remove cervisia from the debian distribution since the QPL does not meet with debian's free software guidelies. Of course this is debian's decision, but nevertheless it seems worth bringing up the two specific issues that concern us: Choice of Law: The "Choice of Law" section states that disputes will be settled by Oslo City Court. This is problematic since it requires recipients of the software to travel to Oslo if a dispute should arise. 6c: Clause 6c requires that the recipient provide any modifications or linked applications to the original software developer upon request. This is problematic for a number of reasons, including requiring recipients to identify themselves and to keep archives of their own software for an indefinite amount of time in case the cervisia authors should make such a request. For a somewhat better summary of the issues that make these two clauses problematic, see the draft overview at http://lists.debian.org/debian-legal/2004/07/msg00157.html and the subsequent thread. Given these issues, is it possible to consider altering the licensing for cervisia in any way? Possibilities are as follows: 1. Make exceptions that deal with these two clauses. This was done by the ocaml developers for similar reasons. Their changes were as follows: - Replace "choice of law" with "choice of venue". Specifically, they replaced that clause with "This license is governed by the Laws of France", without requiring any specific venue for resolving disputes. - Add the following exception: "As a special exception to the Q Public Licence, you may develop application programs, reusable components and other software items that link with the original or modified versions of the Compiler and are not made available to the general public, without any of the additional requirements listed in clause 6c of the Q Public licence." 2. Alternatively it might be worth considering a dual license for cervisia, similar to what Trolltech has done with Qt. I'm CCing this message to 296514@bugs.debian.org, which is the bug that was filed requesting the removal of cervisia from debian. If this CC could be preserved it would be appreciated. I have also CCed the three primary authors for cervisia; apologies if you get this twice. Thanks, Ben.