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RE: [JDEV] oops



Ok...this is good...I hadn't paid enough attention to the license.
Anyway, I should get a totally definitive answer soon...I just finished
firing off an email to Peter Gutmann just before Thomas' last message came
in...

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Corbett J. Klempay			         Quote of the Week:
http://www.acm.jhu.edu/~cklempay       "A commune is where people join 
					together to share their lack of 
					wealth."
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

On Mon, 26 Apr 1999, Thomas Charron wrote:

> 	I don't see how the crytlib licence prevents it from being distributed with
> GPL'd software.  The licence itself is virtually identical TO the gpl.
> Here's a copy for those of you who haven't taken a peek:
> 
> --- Licence
> This software is distributed as copyrighted freeware, with copyrights on
> individual encryption modules being held by the contributing authors.  You
> are
> free to use the code in any way you want, with the following restrictions:
> 
> - If you make any changes to the code, you should send a copy of the changes
> to
>   the author or authors to allow them to integrate the changes into the
> code.
>   This is to allow a central consistent version to be maintained.
> 
> - If you use the library as part of a product, you should offer a copy to
> the
>   authors of the library.  This is to let the authors know that their work
> is
>   being usefully applied.  You should also give the authors credit in your
>   software and/or documentation.  This is to let others know that the
> authors
>   work is being usefully applied :-).
> 
> - Any commercial software you create with this code may not be merely a set
> or
>   subset of the encryption library, with or without minor added
> functionality.
>   In particular you can't sell the library (or any modified form of it) as
>   "your" encryption product.  You can sell your own product which utilizes
> the
>   encryption library, but you can't charge for the library itself or claim
> it
>   as yours.  This is to stop people adding their own wrappers and selling it
> as
>   "their" encryption product.
> 
> 
> These terms are pretty much identical to the library GPL, which seem to be
> about the least restrictive usage terms around apart from outright public
> domain software.
> ---
> 
> 	Addressed one by one:
> 
> 1)  Since we are distributing under GPL, source will be provided back to the
> author.
> 
> 2)  Same as above..  Author get's a copyof the source.
> 
> 3)  This isn't commercial software, we're not selling it.  We'd have a
> problem if someone decided to package it up and sell their version, which
> yes, is legal under GPL, but that becomes there problem, now doesn't it?
> 
> 	Also, the GPL merely states that any software based on it must be released
> as full source, which this does...
> 
> --
> Thomas Charron
> United Parcel Service
> Northeast Region
> "Moving at the speed of a T3 Trunk Line!"
> 
> 
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: owner-jdev@jabber.org [mailto:owner-jdev@jabber.org]On Behalf Of
> > Corbett J. Klempay
> > Sent: Monday, April 26, 1999 11:49 AM
> > To: jdev@jabber.org
> > Subject: [JDEV] oops
> >
> >
> > I just realized what probably will prevent me from using the cryptlib I
> > mentioned last night...since it has its own non-GPL licence, it would
> > prevent us from distributing Jabber under the GPL (which is the idea,
> > correct?)  I guess it's back to the coding, then....
> >
> > CJK
> >
>