How Sun's Java got into Debian
How Sun's Java got into Debian
Posted May 25, 2006 7:06 UTC (Thu) by davidw (guest, #947)In reply to: How Sun's Java got into Debian by mgb
Parent article: How Sun's Java got into Debian
-legal is sort of a dubious resource in any case, as, last I checked, it was mostly amateurs - not legal professionals. While they may have the best of intentions and be smart people, not having a legal background is a big impediment to some legal discussions.
Posted May 25, 2006 15:51 UTC (Thu)
by bronson (subscriber, #4806)
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Posted May 25, 2006 17:31 UTC (Thu)
by mbanck (subscriber, #9035)
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The license was reviewed by the person who usually reviews licenses for non-free - James Troup. Argueably, more review might not been a bad idea, but to say there was a non-process is totally false; in fact, I believe the correct process has been used. Michael
Posted May 25, 2006 21:29 UTC (Thu)
by smitty_one_each (subscriber, #28989)
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Posted May 27, 2006 22:28 UTC (Sat)
by davidw (guest, #947)
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You would hire a professional programmer to work with your source code, wouldn't you?
True. However, -legal is a LOT better than the non-process that rammed Java into Debian without any meaningful license analysis at all.How Sun's Java got into Debian
True. However, -legal is a LOT better than the non-process that rammed Java into Debian without any meaningful license analysis at all.How Sun's Java got into Debian
Not sure why the legal system has to be so obscure that it requires "legal professionals" to understand it. Does the legal system serve us, or we it?How Sun's Java got into Debian
You may have a point, but unless the system changes, involving legal professionals in the legal review of licenses is a sensible thing to do.How Sun's Java got into Debian