From: b...@pixar.com (Bruce Perens) Subject: Official policy statement: Debian's Relationship with FSF Date: 1996/03/29 Message-ID: < m0u2r5X-00063bC@mongo.pixar.com>#1/1 X-Deja-AN: 145178049 resent-cc: recipient list not shown: ; old-return-path: < b...@pixar.com> x-mailing-list: < debian-user@Pixar.com> archive/latest/5988 x-hdr-sender: b...@pixar.com resent-from: debian-u...@Pixar.com resent-date: 30 Mar 1996 03:12:50 GMT x-env-sender: debian-user-requ...@Pixar.com newsgroups: linux.debian.user resent-message-id: <"-FpFiB.A.sGH.gaKXx"@mongo> x-loop: debian-u...@Pixar.com resent-sender: debian-user-requ...@Pixar.com DEBIAN's RELATIONSHIP WITH FSF We want to be able to work with FSF, but we acknowledge that our goals sometimes differ from those of FSF. Thus, we've set down some policy items for our relationship with FSF and others. We feel that these policies align us with FSF's major goals, and at the same time give us the freedom to make our own design decisions for the system. 1. The core of the Debian distribution must be entirely freely redistributable software. Non-essential accessories may have different licensing terms, but we of course encourage their authors to make them freely redistributable. 2. We assert that the GPL and LGPL are our preferred software licenses. Other licenses that make software freely redistributable, such as the BSD license, the "Artistic" license, and public-domain are acceptable to us. 3. We recognize and honor the contribution of BSD, FSF, independent hackers, businesses, schools, students, and people who write directly for Debian, and do not place a greater attribution on one group than any other. 4. Any interested party is welcome to participate in Debian as a peer with all other Debian contributors and repackagers. An overriding priority will not be placed on any one group's requirements. We invite FSF and any other organization to participate under these terms. 5. The name of this distribution is currently "Debian Linux". The name may change, but we don't plan on using the GNU name, simply because we have different management and slightly different goals from those of FSF's GNU project. We've been using the baby GNU logo, but we will cede that to FSF so that they can use it on their own repackaging of Debian. FSF is welcome to market their own version of Debian as "Official GNU Linux" or any name they choose. 6. We recommend that Linuxdoc-SGML be used for documentation. Linuxdoc-SGML is an markup language that generates texinfo, groff, and HTML. It generates documentation in a format that is compatible with both Debian's and FSF's requirements. We continue to accept any machine-readable documentation format that can be rendered using free software tools. -- Pixar Animation Studios: Reality is not our business. Pixar's "Toy Story" $184,592,498 domestic, $49 million overseas and counting.