From b9d0cf127e2afeb4580255e5ee6bf8ec794c5ed6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Rob Landley Date: Sat, 5 Jan 2008 18:13:19 -0600 Subject: More web page tweaks. --- www/about.html | 7 +++++++ www/license.html | 35 ----------------------------------- 2 files changed, 7 insertions(+), 35 deletions(-) (limited to 'www') diff --git a/www/about.html b/www/about.html index 4dae2d2..4bbc180 100755 --- a/www/about.html +++ b/www/about.html @@ -93,4 +93,11 @@ versions ("tip" is the current development version).

mailing list are also good ways to track what's going on with the project.

+

What's the background image on the web page?

+ +

It's carefully stacked soda cans. Specifically, +it's a bunch of the original "Coke Zero" and "Pepsi One" cans, circa 2006, +stacked to spell out the binary values of the ascii string "Toybox" (with +null terminator at the bottom).

+ diff --git a/www/license.html b/www/license.html index 8dcd307..d67269d 100755 --- a/www/license.html +++ b/www/license.html @@ -64,41 +64,6 @@ being explicit about it.)

If you're wondering why this particular clarification exists, there's a longer explanation.

-

The reason for this section is that -what the FSF did to Mepis was inexcusable. (Further discussed -in this -thread.) Mepis partnered with Ubuntu, put out a press release quoting -Ubuntu's founder about how cool the partnership was, and then pointed to -Ubuntu's source repository for packages it was using unmodified Ubuntu versions -of. As far as we're concerned, Mepis didn't do anything wrong, and the FSF -was a bully. The FSF was wrong when it tried to make an example out of a -company that was acting in good faith.

- -

To make sure the FSF doesn't pick on anyone else against our wishes, we're -clarifying that if you didn't modify the source code, and the binaries you're -distributing can be entirely regenerated from a public upstream source, -pointing to that upstream source in good faith is good enough for us, as long -as they don't mind the extra bandwidth and the correct source code stays -available at that location for the duration of your responsiblity to -redistribute source.

- -

This doesn't mean it's fair for a Fortune 500 company to point millions of -people at somebody's home DSL line (certainly not without asking first). -And if the source that's available there isn't the complete source you used -to produce your binaries, you haven't fulfilled your obligations either. -And if the code stops being available at that location, you're not off the -hook and have to find a new location or put up your own mirror. And obviously -it has to be the _right_ source code (if you modified it, we want the patch, -and claiming you didn't modify it when you actually did is fraud).

- -

So this is not a "get out of jail free" card: It's still your responsibility -to make the complete corresponding source available. We're just saying you can -reasonably delegate to something like Sourceforge or ibilbio, and as long as -everyone who wants the source can get it, we're happy. If the site you point -to objects or goes down, responsibility obviously reverts to you. But if this -project needs mirrors, we'll _ask_. (Most likely we'll ask someone like -sourceforge, OSL, ISC, ibiblio, archive.org...)

-

Finally, section 9 does not apply to this project. We're specifying a specific version, it's version 2. There is no "or later versions" clause to require interpreting, so none of that triggers for us.

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