Set-Object used to be licensed under the Perl Artistic license, and the documentation still says so (I expect it being updated with the next upstream release). Due to the artistic license not being accepted as free license by the FSF I've asked the authors whenever they agree to relicense the package and fortunaly they did, so the package now carries the same license as perl itself (which is the choice between Artistic and GPL). See also: http://dev.perl.org/licenses/ https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Licensing https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=467175 The relevant messages from the authors (Jean-Louis Leroy and Sam Vilain) are listed below. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- From: "jl" To: Gerd Hoffmann Subject: Re: Set-Object license question Date: Sat, 08 Nov 2008 08:51:51 +0100 Hello Gerd. I agree to relicense Set::Object under the same terms as (current) Perl itself - which is probably the choice between two licenses: Artistic 2.0 and GPL. Cordially, Jean-Louis ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: Re: Set-Object license question From: Sam Vilain To: Gerd Hoffmann Date: Fri, 24 Oct 2008 00:33:23 +1300 On Wed, 2008-10-22 at 11:58 +0200, Gerd Hoffmann wrote: > Sam Vilain wrote: > > AFAIK the original author has not responded to requests for relicensing > > under GPLv2. > > You are refering to Jean-Louis Leroy I guess? That's right, of Sound Object Logic. > > Could get a notary public to serve them notice of the intention to > > relicense Set::Object as GPL under the requirements of the license for > > Tangram. If they don't make claim, then it should be able to be > > relicensed, I'd guess. > > I think I'll better try again asking by email first. > > Given you apparently tried already to get it re-licenced I assume you > are fine with GPL, right? > > What about "Catalyst IT (NZ) Limited" listed in the man-page? Given you > are still listed as maintainer @ CPAN I assume this is the company you > are working for? Yes, I can speak for that copyright holder, and they are happy to license under any FSF-approved Free Software license, including the Perl Artistic/GPL disjunction. Contact Jean-Louis - if nothing comes back I might have to investigate a rewrite. Cheers, Sam.