D. J. Bernstein
Frequently asked questions from distributors
This page is for people
who want to distribute copies of my software or derivative works:
for example, an operating system that includes the software.
You don't need to read this page
if you simply want to use my software.
You are free to
download the software from my web server;
you then own that copy of the software,
and you are free to compile it and run it.
You also don't need to read this page
if you simply want to set up a mirror
of my web pages.
What are the distribution terms for daemontools?
2007.12.28: I hereby place the daemontools package
(in particular, daemontools-0.76.tar.gz,
with MD5 checksum 1871af2453d6e464034968a0fbcb2bfc)
into the public domain.
The package is no longer copyrighted.
What are the distribution terms for djbdns?
2007.12.28: I hereby place the djbdns package
(in particular,
djbdns-1.05.tar.gz,
with MD5 checksum 3147c5cd56832aa3b41955c7a51cbeb2)
into the public domain.
The package is no longer copyrighted.
What are the distribution terms for djbfft?
2008.02.27: I hereby place the djbfft package
(in particular,
djbfft-0.76.tar.gz,
with MD5 checksum 9349eff24c1f9fdfb98cfb51bece8efb)
into the public domain.
The package is no longer copyrighted.
What are the distribution terms for dot-forward?
2008.06.01: I hereby place the dot-forward package
(in particular,
dot-forward-0.71.tar.gz,
with MD5 checksum 1fefd9760e4706491fb31c7511d69bed)
into the public domain.
The package is no longer copyrighted.
What are the distribution terms for ezmlm?
2008.06.01: I hereby place the ezmlm package
(in particular,
ezmlm-0.53.tar.gz,
with MD5 checksum 108c632caaa8cdbfd3041e6c449191b2)
into the public domain.
The package is no longer copyrighted.
What are the distribution terms for fastforward?
2008.06.01: I hereby place the fastforward package
(in particular,
fastforward-0.51.tar.gz,
with MD5 checksum 6dc619180ba9726380dc1047e45a1d8d)
into the public domain.
The package is no longer copyrighted.
What are the distribution terms for primegen?
2007.12.29: I hereby place the primegen package
(in particular,
primegen-0.97.tar.gz,
with MD5 checksum 7f2a260e5d0c0a4f9dd2e10cc6c8b984)
into the public domain.
The package is no longer copyrighted.
What are the distribution terms for qmail?
There is a separate page for
qmail distributors.
What are the distribution terms for ucspi-tcp?
2007.12.28: I hereby place the ucspi-tcp package
(in particular, ucspi-tcp-0.88.tar.gz,
with MD5 checksum 39b619147db54687c4a583a7a94c9163)
into the public domain.
The package is no longer copyrighted.
Am I free to modify uncopyrighted packages and distribute modified versions?
Yes.
But this does not mean that modifications are encouraged!
Please take time to ensure that your distributions of my software support
exactly the same interface
as everyone else's distributions.
In particular, if you move files,
please set up symbolic links from the original locations,
so that you don't frivolously break scripts that work everywhere else.
Rick Moen says you can revoke these permissions by changing your web page!
Is that a question?
Rick Moen is an idiot.
(In case there are several Rick Moens in the world:
I'm talking about rick@linuxmafia.com.)
Feel free to ask your attorney to explain waivers to you.
Wait, now Rick Moen says he never said that!
Is that a question?
Here's Rick Moen's first public statement (2000.11.09), in his own words:
If you become dependent on Bernstein software,
you run the risk that he might cease development and withdraw it from the Net. Neither you nor
anyone else would then have the legal right to take over development and distribute even the old
versions, let alone new ones. ...
You're betting that Bernstein never changes his mind, if you use qmail.
(Emphasis added.)
Here's Rick Moen's second public statement (2001.04.15), in his own words:
Unmodified specific versions of qmail and djbdns (formerly dnscache) may be redistributed -- or at
least so claimed Bernstein's Web pages, recently. Will those continue to be there, to point to?
...
Essentially, you're betting that Bernstein never changes his mind, if you rely on such software.
(Emphasis added.)
Here's a subsequent public statement (2001.09.01) from Moen's friend J. Paul Reed:
DJB could, theoretically, retract his sofftware, shutdown his webpages,
and proceed to sue everyone distributing his software.
(Followed, in the original, by a link to Moen's web page.)
Here's some subsequent backpedaling by Moen:
``Are you saying that DJB can revoke the licence to his software
by changing or removing his Web pages? No, of course not.''