License change for ghostscript
Adam Williamson
awilliam at redhat.com
Wed Aug 5 18:33:13 UTC 2009
On Wed, 2009-08-05 at 00:15 -0400, Tom "spot" Callaway wrote:
> > I should probably talk to Spot about that.
>
> So, the rule here is that we don't take outside linking into effect when
> marking the package's licensing. We go by what the source in the tarball
> tells us. Otherwise, it would become massively too complicated to figure
> it out for a lot of packages.
I see that, but it presents a rather significant problem.
Say we have something whose own license is LGPLv2+ - let's call it
Component B - linking against something whose license is GPLv3
(Component C).
Component B is then effectively GPLv3, but our license tags will not
reflect that. If there is something _else_ that in turn links against
Component B - call it Component A - and we want to find out whether
there's a license conflict, we will treat Component B, for license
checking purposes, as if it were LGPLv2+. But, for our purposes, it no
longer is - we can only consider it to be GPLv3. So we may say that
there's no problem with Component A linking against Component B, when
actually there is...
--
Adam Williamson
Fedora QA Community Monkey
IRC: adamw | Fedora Talk: adamwill AT fedoraproject DOT org
http://www.happyassassin.net
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