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Requested by Donald R. Robertson III via gnu.org ticket #1028294. * config/srclist.txt: Drop outdated files. * doc/Copyright/conditions.txt: Update to latest. * doc/Copyright/assign.changes.manual: Delete. * doc/Copyright/assign.future.manual: Likewise. * doc/Copyright/assign.manual: Likewise. * doc/Copyright/assign.translation.manual: Likewise. * doc/Copyright/disclaim.changes.manual: Likewise. * doc/Copyright/disclaim.manual: Likewise. * doc/Copyright/disclaim.program: Likewise. Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
137 lines
6.3 KiB
Plaintext
137 lines
6.3 KiB
Plaintext
Legal Issues about Contributing Code to GNU last updated 14 July 2015
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Project GNU has to be careful to obey copyright laws, even though
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these laws are wrong when they stop people from sharing generally
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useful published information such as software, because we are in the
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public eye. We also use copyright to defend users' freedom, by means
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of copyleft (though this does not excuse copyright law for helping
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to make software proprietary).
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This means that if you want to contribute software to GNU, you have to
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do something to give us legal permission to use it. There are three
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ways this can be done:
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* Assign the copyright to the Free Software Foundation.
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This allows the FSF to act to stop violations of the GPL.
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* Keep the copyright and release the program yourself under the GNU
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GPL. (This alternative is too impractical for contributions to a
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preexisting FSF-copyrighted GNU program.)
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* Put the code in the public domain. Then there is nothing to stop
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hoarding of modified versions, but we can still use the program in GNU.
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Most of these alternatives require a signed piece of paper, or in some
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cases a digital signature, to make it happen.
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* Assigning copyright.
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Assigning the copyright means signing a contract that makes the Free
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Software Foundation the "owner" of the program according to the law.
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As the copyright holder, the Foundation can sue anyone who tries to
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distribute the program as a proprietary product. We are willing to
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keep your name on the program as the author for as long as the program
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remains recognizably distinct. ("Owner" is in quotes to show that we
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don't really believe in this kind of ownership.)
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The assignment contract commits the foundation to setting distribution
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terms that permit free redistribution.
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Often we don't want to do the work of starting to distribute a program
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right away. There are many things which we will need in order to have
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a complete system but which aren't really useful until the rest of the
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system is done. But signing the assignment does not stop you from
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distributing the program yourself--as long as you do so under the GNU
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terms. You don't have to wait for us to start distributing. You can
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start distributing as soon as you attach our standard copyleft to the
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files. (Ask for our advice on how to do this.)
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The assignment contract we normally use has a clause that permits you
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to use your code in proprietary programs, on 30 days' notice. (The 30
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days' notice is there because, through a legal technicality, it would
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improve our position in a suit against a hoarder.) Although we
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believe that proprietary software is wrong, we include this clause
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because it would serve no purpose to ask you to promise not to do it.
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You're giving us a gift in the first place.
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You don't need to invoke this clause in order to distribute copies as
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free software under the GNU GPL, since everyone is allowed to do that.
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* Releasing it yourself.
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You can release a program yourself under copyleft distribution terms
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such as the GNU GPL. (In order to accept the program as GNU software,
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we would have to be happy with your choice of terms.) This does not
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require a contract between you and the FSF, but we would appreciate
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having a signed piece of paper to confirm your decision.
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If someone violates your terms--for example, if someone gets a copy
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from us, and uses it as a basis for a proprietary product in violation
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of the terms--we cannot sue him. You would have to sue, or he gets
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away with it.
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* Public domain.
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If you put the program in the public domain, we prefer to have a signed
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piece of paper--a disclaimer of rights--from you confirming this. If the
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program is not very important, we can do without one; the worst that could
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happen is that we might some day be forced to stop using it.
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The law says that anyone can copyright a modified version of the public
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domain work. (This doesn't restrict the original, which remains in the
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public domain; only the changes are copyrighted.) If we make extensive
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changes, we will probably do this and add our usual copyleft. If we make
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small changes, we will leave the version we distribute in the public
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domain.
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* What about your employer?
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If you are employed to do programming, or have made an agreement with your
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employer that says it owns programs you write, we need a signed piece of
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paper from your employer disclaiming rights to the program. It should be
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signed by a vice president or general manager of the company. If you
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can't get at them, it is almost as good to find someone who signs licenses
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for software that is purchased. Here is a sample wording:
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Digital Simulation Corporation hereby disclaims all copyright interest
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in the program "sample.el" (a program to direct assemblers to make passes
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at compilers under GNU Emacs) written by Hugh Hacker.
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<signature of Mo Ghoul>, 1 April 1987
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Mo Ghoul, President of Vice, Digital Simulation Corp.
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The description of what the program does is just to make it clearer
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what the disclaimer covers.
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If what you did was change an existing program, it should say this:
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...in the changes and enhancements made by Hugh Hacker to the
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program "sample.el".
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* Did anyone else contribute?
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If someone else contributed more than a few lines here or there to the
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program, then that person too is an author, and that person too needs to
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sign papers just as you do. So may that person's employer. However, if
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his contribution is just a fraction of the whole work, it is satisfactory
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if he disclaims his own rights, even if you are assigning yours. (If just
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the minor contributors' work goes in the public domain, that doesn't leave
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much of a loophole for hoarders.)
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If you incorporated packages which you found floating around as "public
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domain", we might still want to track down their authors, to get
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disclaimers to reassure us that they really are in the public domain. So
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keep track of what these packages are and who wrote them.
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* A reminder:
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In working on a project for GNU, DO NOT study and follow any Unix
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sources or other non-free software that might have any bearing on the
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project. Don't refer to them at all, unless you are forced to for
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non-GNU reasons.
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It is not considered a serious problem if you have read Unix sources
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or other non-free source code in the past for other purposes, provided
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you don't copy anything in particular from them. However, referring
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to them while you do the work could cause us legal problems later.
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