Format: https://www.debian.org/doc/packaging-manuals/copyright-format/1.0/
Upstream-Name: <pkg>
Source: <path_to_download>

Files: *
Copyright: 1991 Steve Kirkendall <kirkenda@cs.pdx.edu>
License: no_restrictions
 Elvis is freely redistributable, in either source form or executable form.
 There are no restrictions on how you may use it.
 .
 ==================== clarification ================================
 .
 From: Steve Kirkendall <skirkendall@uswest.net>
 Reply-To: kirkenda@cs.pdx.edu
 To: Miquel van Smoorenburg <miquels@cistron.nl>
 Subject: Re: elvis 1.4
 Message-ID: <3A21A76D.CE7C4D2@uswest.net>
 Date: Sun, 26 Nov 2000 16:14:37 -0800
 Organization: Elvis
 References: <20001122144219.A6118@cistron.nl>
 .
 Miquel van Smoorenburg wrote:
 > 
 > Hello,
 > 
 >         I've packaged elvis 1.4 up as "elvis tiny" to have a small
 > vi clone for use on bootfloppies etc for the Debian/Linux distribution.
 > 
 > The README says:
 > 
 >   Elvis is freely redistributable, in either source form or executable form.
 >   There are no restrictions on how you may use it.
 > 
 > Did you mean that it is allright to distribute modified versions
 > without any restrictions as well (I assume so, but someone filed
 > a bugreport against the elvis-tiny package claiming it wasn't
 > DFSG-free)
 .
 Yes, modified versions can be freely redistributed.
 .
 Elvis 2.0 was distributed with a slightly more restrictive license,
 which made some people uncomfortable; that's probably where the bug
 report came from.  Elvis 2.1 and later are distributed under the Perl
 "Artistic" license.

Files: debian/*
Copyright: 1997-2016 Miquel van Smoorenburg <miquels@cistron.nl>
License: freely_redistributable
 No specific license was specified.

 
