Hi, I also do not think the one-license model is workable. We already have enough of a hard time getting people to improve kde.org, forcing a religion on them is not the way to improve that. OTOH a guidlines of acceptable licenses would be a good approach. I also would prefer that we not force that the text be modifiable. E.g., the GNU Public License (the license itself) is not modifiable, yet I do not think we want to ban it from kde.org. There are other things like that - think for example of the KDE eV statutes, those cannot just be changed by anyone. The examples of corporate logos have also been mentioned. Another one I have personal experience with is the press releases - I do not think people providing quotes for example will ever agree that you can change them to say whatever you want. I also do not think that any "automatic" license scheme is enforceable. I think par. b/c of the abuse by media conglomerates it now takes some rather informed consent to give up or license your copyrights. Good thing in general, whether it is good for KDE or not is another question . . . . How to resolve all these issues is difficult and explains why currently the licensing is not as clear as one would hope. I wish I had a good suggestion :-/. The best I can come up with is when people contribute ask them to be explicit about a license, but in many cases that will not be possible (e.g., LWE logo on the front page, etc.). Ciao, Dre Marc Mutz wrote: > > On Thursday 30 January 2003 02:21, Dirk Mueller wrote: > > > I think we need one, to ensure that the contributions we receive are > > permanent and not subject to the contributors will ("ah no, you can't > > use it anymore, remove it"). > > > That can't be prohbited anyway. You'd need a copyright assignment to > make that permanent and as you know (cf. Hamburg meeting), that's not > possible within the droit d'auteur model. > > Marc _______________________________________________ Kde-policies mailing list Kde-policies@mail.kde.org http://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde-policies