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The Debian Free Software Guidelines (DFSG) is a set of guidelines that the Debian Project uses to determine whether a software license is a free software license, which in turn is used to determine whether a piece of software can be included in Debian. The DFSG is part of the Debian Social Contract.
The guidelines
HistoryThe DFSG was first published together with the first version of the Debian Social Contract in July 1997.1 The primary authors were Bruce Perens and several other Debian developers at the time. The Open Source Definition was created by modifying the text of the DFSG soon afterwards. DFSG was preceded by Free Software Foundation's Free Software Definition. Once the DFSG became the Open Source Definition, Richard Stallman saw the need to differentiate Free Software from Open Source and promoted the Free Software Definition.citation needed Published versions of FSF's Free Software Definition existed as early as 1986, having been published in the first edition of the (now defunct) GNU's Bulletin.2 It is worth noting that the core of the Free Software Definition is the Four Freedoms, which clearly preceded the drafting and promulgation of the DFSG. In November 1998, Ian Jackson and others proposed several changes in a draft versioned 1.4, but the changes were never made official. Jackson stated3 that the problems were "loose wording" and the patch clause. As of 2007[update], the document has never been revised. Nevertheless, there were changes made to the Social Contract which were considered to affect the parts of the distribution covered by the DFSG. The Debian General Resolution 2004-0034, titled "Editorial amendments to the social contract", modified the Social Contract. The proposer Andrew Suffield stated5:
However, the change of the sentence We promise to keep the Debian GNU/Linux Distribution entirely free software into We promise that the Debian system and all its components will be free resulted in the release manager, Anthony Towns, making a practical change6:
This prompted another General Resolution, 2004-0047, in which the developers voted overwhelmingly against such action, and decided to postpone those changes until the next release (whose development started a year later, in June 2005). ApplicationSoftwareMost discussions about the DFSG happen on the debian-legal mailing list. When a Debian Developer first uploads a package for inclusion in Debian, the ftpmaster team checks the software licenses and determines whether they are in accordance with the social contract. The team sometimes confers with the debian-legal list in difficult cases. Non-software contentThe DFSG is focused on software, but in June 2004 the Debian project decided to apply the same principles to software documentation, multimedia data and other content. The non-software content of Debian began to comply with the DFSG more strictly in Debian 4.0 (released in April 2007) and subsequent releases. GFDLMuch documentation written by the GNU Project, the Linux Documentation Project and others licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License contain invariant sections, which do not comply with the DFSG. This assertion is the end result of a long discussion and the General Resolution 2006-0018. Due to the GFDL invariant sections, a small proportion of Debian's content is generally considered to fail to comply with the DFSG. Multimedia filesThere are controversies on what constitutes the source for multimedia files, such as whether an uncompressed image file is the source of a compressed image and whether the 3D model before ray tracing is the source for its resulting image. debian-legal tests for DFSG complianceThe debian-legal mailing list subscribers have created some tests to check whether a license passes the DFSG. The common tests (as described in the draft DFSG FAQ) are the following:
References
See alsoExternal linksWikibooks has a book on the topic of
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