Format: https://www.debian.org/doc/packaging-manuals/copyright-format/1.0/ Upstream-Name: sctpscan Source: https://github.com/philpraxis/sctpscan Files: * Copyright: 2002 - 2009 Philippe Langlois License: EGPL EXCEPTION GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE . Version 2, January 2009 DRAFT 7 - FOR FEEDBACK AND COMMENTS . Copyright (C) 2009 Exception License Foundation . Everybody is allowed to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, but modifying it in any way is not allowed. . Preamble . Licenses for most software and projects used to take away your freedom to share and change them, until the "free" licenses were created. That enabled an enormous quantity of free software and open projects to be created, developed, maintained and expanded way beyond what one could have imagined in the beginning. Internet and the contemporary world would not be what it is without the contribution of so many people participating in the "Free, Libre and Open Source" movement (FLOSS) as some have described it. . The original goal of FLOSS is a success, and now using and developing Open Source projects is a mark of smart thinking. In a perfect world, that would be a great common goal to use and change software freely, and collaborate in order to make the world more open and more diverse. In a perfect world, you wouldn't need an Exception License. We hope that this Exception License will be a sufficient message so that no further abuse are done, and be used more as an "art project example" or "theoretical or philosophical tool" for critical study of Open Source than a real license used in the real world. Sadly, we don't live in a perfect world and some uses are seen by the original Open Source Developers as abuses of their Open Source projects. . Some military equipment are naturally using Open Source, for some weapon systems on ships and airplanes. Some missile may actually be running Linux. Some open source database may be used to track population for ethnic cleansing. Also, on a less dramatic but even more real note, some of the people using Open Source are actually working to make it impossible to develop through DRM, software patents, lobbying or Internet censorship. . Using Free, Libre and Open Source Software for some socially negative activities can be seen as an unfair use of a tool for openness and justice. The social cost of these negative activities is not covered by the people committing such negative actions. Worse, Open Source software used for such negative goals is indeed helping such negative projects, often against the own will of the project developers, creators, maintainers and of the whole community. The eGPL can be seen as a way to redistribute the social and human cost of negative actions back to the original perpetrators of such negative actions. . The goal of this license is then to enable the Open Source developers to choose that their project be covered by an Open Source license, and yet retain the right to exclude some entities from the right of using or modifying this software under this license. In such case, the concerned entities should request another licensing scheme from these Open Source developers in order to use the software. The project team can define groups of Exceptions for its project, and can even subscribe to "feeds" of exceptions that will define in time the group of entities that cannot use the project under eGPL. These feeds can be written by Non-Governmental Organization who know which entities have a detrimental social and human impact. By having such list written, that can help reducing the number of entities with detrimental effect on people and societies, giving them strong incentives to cease negative actions. . Of course, the eGPL itself could be used as a tool in order to exclude entities that do not have any negative impact. As a result, a few restrictions apply to the eGPL. For example, you cannot define Exceptions on a specific person or on an ethnic group. You can however define an Exception for a Country or a Geographic region. Another condition is that the eGPL itself is place under eGPL, creating the first recursive license known to us. The Exception License Foundation will then pay attention to the use of the License and revoke the right of using such license for a given project when abuse of the original intent of the eGPL would be witnessed. For example, one could not agree with an Exception that would prevent "All peace organizations of the world" to use one particular Open Source project. . We protect your rights with three steps: (1) copyright the project or software, (2) propose this license which gives legal permission to copy, distribute and/or modify the software or project, (3) enable you to define for your own project the list of exceptions, that is of entities that cannot use this license and should seek another license for this project. . As with any Open Source license, there is no warranty for this free software. If the software is modified by anyone else and then shared, the recipients have to be aware that what they have is not the genuine, original software, so that any issue due to someone else should not affect the original authors' reputation. Also, people modifying the original project must be aware that they cannot introduce new Exceptions, and that their Exception list is Exactly the same as the original project. The reason behind this is that it would be otherwise very easy for someone to take a project and slightly modify it, create a new project, and then remove all the Exceptions from the new project, therefore breaking the original authors intent. . Finally, as with traditional Open Source License, we state again the obvious that all patents affecting a project or software must be licensed for everyone's free use or not licensed at all . . Exceptions: Exception List Exception Feeds: nonMIL: This license excludes all military entities and their suppliers from usage of the license. . All military and army organization, groups, squadrons or any definition of such armed force All commercial suppliers to all military and army organization, including public and private ones Ministere de la Défense, France. All weapon, bombs, tanks, war jets and mines manufacturers All intelligence agencies working partly or completely in conjunction with army or military powers . SoftwarePatents: Exception on any groups that advocates or promote Software Patents . All commercial entities endorsing Software Patents All lobbying agencies working to promote, defend, advocate, communicate on the advantages of Software Patents All the Patent Offices that currently accept software patents filings . GMOwild: All the organization promoting the culture and farming of Genetically Modified Organisms in the wild. . All the organization promoting the culture and farming of Genetically Modified Organisms in the wild. Any company being part of Monsanto group, in any country. Any laboratory, public or private, receiving more than 10% of its yearly budget from any of the organization mentionned in this list. . CompanyBiggerThan20: Any company, commercial entity that has more than 20 (twenty) employees, contributors, interns or consultant, temporary or permanent. . Any company, commercial entity that has more than 20 (twenty) employees, contributors, interns or consultant, temporary or permanent. . contreHADOPI: Exception for any organization that supports HADOPI legislation to monitor and block the net based on non-existing "evidences". /// Exceptions de toutes les organisations qui supportent HADOPI (loi de surveillance, flicage, blocage d'Internet basé sur des preuves non-existantes). . Any organization supporting HADOPI law. Any part of the French government. The UMP french party that proposed and supports the HADOPI law. Any record label or major company that supports HADOPI. DigiCompanion which supports HADOPI http://www.digicompanion.com/ SACEM http://www.sacem.fr/ NOKIA group companies, worldwide and any company with participation from Nokia Group of at least 10 percent UNAC - Union Nationale des Auteurs et Compositeurs SDLC - Syndicats des Distributeurs de Loisirs Culturels EuropaCorp (Société de Luc Besson qui soutient HADOPI) http://www.europacorp.com/ CSDEM - Chambre Syndicale de l’Edition Musicale SNAC, Syndicat National des Auteurs et des Compositeurs UPFI - Union des Producteurs Phonographiques Français Indépendants http://www.upfi.fr/ SPPF - Société Civile des Producteurs de Phonogrammes en France http://www.sppf.com/ SNEP Syndicat National de l'Édition Phonographique SCPP - Société Civile des Producteurs Phonographiques http://www.scpp.fr/SCPP/ SPPAM Syndicat des Producteurs de Programmes Audiovisuels et Musicaux TF1 - http://www.tf1.fr/tf1-et-vous/reponse-a-vos-questions/bonjour-pouvez-vous-expliquer-le-licenciement-de-mr-jerome -bourreau-4406123.html Arthur H - chanteur pro-HADOPI Advestigo - http://www.advestigo.com/french/products-services-/products-servers/overview/overview/id-menu-79.html Extelia - http://www.extelia.fr/ TMG Files: debian/* Copyright: 2013 Devon Kearns License: GPL-2+ This package is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. . This package is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. . You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see . On Debian systems, the complete text of the GNU General Public License version 2 can be found in "/usr/share/common-licenses/GPL-2".