Re: Documenting Gnome apps with the GPL
- From: Richard Stallman <rms gnu org>
- To: d-mueth uchicago edu
- Cc: kirillov math sunysb edu, acuster nature berkeley edu, gnome-hackers gnome org, foundation-list gnome org, gnome-doc-list gnome org
- Subject: Re: Documenting Gnome apps with the GPL
- Date: Mon, 31 Dec 2001 11:17:25 -0700 (MST)
Then, all other GNOME packages and packages for misc. GNOME apps do not
ship the GFDL and have their documentation link to the local copy shipped
with gnome-core.
This doesn't satisfy the GFDL, because each app distribution has to
contain a copy of the license. (More precisely, each manual or each
collection of manuals must contain a copy.)
It is ok if, on installation, each app replaces its copy of the GFDL
with a hard link to the standard copy, if that is present and
identical. That would save space in the local installation, in the
normal case.
This is a solution which is not GNOME-centric, so an entire
GNU/Linux distribution could have just one copy of the GFDL
instead of many.]
I believe Debian GNU/Linux avoids local duplicates of the GPL in the
way I described above.
2) For HTML documentation on the web: The documents should link to a copy
of the GDFL which is also on the web, preferably on the same server (ie.
on www.gnome.org).
Just making a link to a copy of the GFDL somewhere is not sufficient
to carry out the requirements. Each manual, or each collection of
manuals, must contain a copy of the GFDL. When you make a collection
of manuals in HTML, it is natural to put a link to that copy in each
of the manuals. But it is not the link that does the job, it is the
fact of being part of a collection which contains a copy.
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