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* Fwd: reiser4 non-free?
@ 2004-04-24 19:32 Domenico Andreoli
  2004-04-25 16:13 ` MJ Ray
                   ` (3 more replies)
  0 siblings, 4 replies; 130+ messages in thread
From: Domenico Andreoli @ 2004-04-24 19:32 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Hans Reiser; +Cc: Sami Liedes, ed, debian-legal, reiserfs-list

hi Hans,

  we have bad news for your filesystems :(( it happens that some sections
of the license are not compatible with Debian Free Software Guidelines [0].

Even more grave is that something makes them also not suited for debian's
non-free archive.

I'm sorry but if thing do not get fixed, this stuff won't ship with
next distribution release.

Here follows the message posted to debian-legal mailing list which
starts the thread.

cheers
domenico

[0] http://www.debian.org/social_contract

----- Forwarded message from Sami Liedes <sliedes@cc.hut.fi> -----

Date: Sat, 24 Apr 2004 14:40:13 +0300
From: Sami Liedes <sliedes@cc.hut.fi>
To: debian-legal@lists.debian.org
Cc: ed@debian.org, cavok@debian.org
Subject: reiser4 non-free?

[Cc:'d to the reiser4progs maintainers. Please Cc: me when replying,
I'm not subscribed to -legal.]

There has previously been discussion at least in April 2003 on this
list about the freeness of reiserfs.

It seems a further "clarification" has been added to the license (GPL
+ clarifications) in both reiser4progs and kernel-patch-2.6-reiser4
since then. This is the section that has been modified:

> Finally, nothing in this license shall be interpreted to allow you to
> fail to fairly credit me, or to remove my credits such as by creating
> a front end that hides my credits from the user or renaming mkreiser4
> to mkyourcompanyfs or even just make_filesystem, without my
> permission, unless you are an end user not redistributing to others.
> If you have doubts about how to properly do that, or about what is
> fair, ask.  (Last I spoke with him Richard was contemplating how best
> to address the fair crediting issue in the next GPL version.)

New here is the "such as by creating a front end that hides [...] or
even just make_filesystem". The controversy last year was created by
mkreiserfs printing an overly verbose (tens of lines of sponsor
credits and other non-licensing information) advertisement when
running from the command line and Mr. Reiser's assertion that removing
it violates the GPL.

To me, these new "clarifications" seem non-free. (IANADD, and I
believe the other IANA* goes without saying. :-)

Another section has been added after the above one:

> Also, a clustering file system built to work on top of this file
> system shall be considered a derivative work for the purposes of
> interpreting the GPL license granted herein.  Plugins are also to be
> considered derivative works.  Share code or pay money, we give you the
> choice.

Surely a license cannot add anything to the set of derived works (if
the other work is not derived, the license obviously doesn't apply to
it and hence never gets to say it is derived; if it is, it is even
without the license saying so). However I believe -legal has not
considered text like this a problem before (I might be wrong though).

	Sami

----- End forwarded message -----


-----[ Domenico Andreoli, aka cavok
 --[ http://people.debian.org/~cavok/gpgkey.asc
   ---[ 3A0F 2F80 F79C 678A 8936  4FEE 0677 9033 A20E BC50

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 130+ messages in thread
* RE: Fwd: reiser4 non-free?
@ 2004-05-03 17:41 Burnes, James
  2004-05-03 17:45 ` Hans Reiser
  2004-05-03 18:38 ` Martin List-Petersen
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 130+ messages in thread
From: Burnes, James @ 2004-05-03 17:41 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Hans Reiser, Martin List-Petersen
  Cc: Don Armstrong, debian-legal, reiserfs-list

Is there any way to do an MD5 of either (1) each module in a software
subsystem or (2) each software version and then have a central registry
where interested developers and users can go to see the credits?

That way you could simply do an MD5 of the current binary and use that
fingerprint to see who wrote and contributed to it.  Much like the CDDB
database takes a track/time fingerprint of CD's and then tells you which
songs and artist made the CD.

This could be a kind of historical registry for developers.  If they
want to they can use it to demonstrate to potential employers,
contractors and/or new IPOs to prove their contributions.

It might also be invaluable to eventual science historians that would
like to research the individuals contributing to certain important
systems.

That would seem to be the scalable way to do it.  You could also include
the credits in the source code, but not require them to be duplicated in
in GPL derived works.

I'm sure there are angles I haven't thought of since I'm running on 3
hours sleep.  Maybe a way to look at binary diffs and say, "this is 95%
similar to ReiserFS Version 4.3, would you like to view the credits for
this system?"

Or something like that.

jim burnes
security engineer
great-west, denver
 

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Hans Reiser [mailto:reiser@namesys.com]
> Sent: Monday, May 03, 2004 11:05 AM
> To: Martin List-Petersen
> Cc: Don Armstrong; debian-legal@lists.debian.org; reiserfs-
> list@namesys.com
> Subject: Re: Fwd: reiser4 non-free?
> 
> Martin List-Petersen wrote:
> 
> >On Sun, 2004-05-02 at 22:55, Don Armstrong wrote:
> >
> >
> >>>>Furthermore, the list of credits are still included (to my
knowledge)
> >>>>in /usr/share/doc/resierfsprogs/README.gz.
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>oh, well, that is almost as good as putting them on the dark side
of
> >>>the moon....  a credit read by no one has no meaning.
> >>>
> >>>
> >
> >I don't know what you are reading once you've installed a new program
on
> >your system, but the README, README.Debian and the man-pages are for
me
> >usually the FIRST place, since it might hold valuable information and
> >safe me the trouble, which i may have, if i didn't had read it.
> >
> >
> I never read these (except the man pages) unless the install fails in
> some way (I read the NVIDIA ones many times....), and neither do 99%
of
> real users, including 99% of reiserfs users.  As a user, I can handle
> the distro flashing information on my screen as it installs and I can
> read that, or printing credits when I select a particular package for
> the install, and I can handle a tool printing credits when it starts
up
> (ala mkreiser4) for me to read, but going through a list of 3000
> packages after the install completes and reading their readmes and
> credits files just ain't gonna happen.
> 
> As a developer, I can probably be talked out of anything that makes
the
> install slower or more awkward or adds more clicks.  If there is
another
> paradigm in place for displaying info about the packages during the
> install (I encourage you to have one), I would most likely be happy to
> conform to that.
> 
> >So, if you know somebody (including yourself) that doesn't do it I'm
> >really in doubt about the security of your system. There is actually
> >useful information in there.
> >
> >/Martin
> >--
> >The camel has a single hump;
> >The dromedary two;
> >Or else the other way around.
> >I'm never sure.  Are you?
> >                -- Ogden Nash
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 130+ messages in thread
[parent not found: <A69517E67905B6429D57AA9EB6C86E6855266A@haynesmail.haynes-group.com>]
* RE: Fwd: reiser4 non-free?
@ 2004-05-04 19:18 Burnes, James
  2004-05-05  3:11 ` Michael Milverton
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 130+ messages in thread
From: Burnes, James @ 2004-05-04 19:18 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: MJ Ray, debian-legal, reiserfs-list

It disturbs me that such a great piece of software engineering like
ReiserV3 and V4 is sullied by licensing arguments about whether someone
is going to plagiarize them.

I imagine that nearly all software engineers would be horrified at the
thought of stealing the Reiser3 and 4 code and representing them as
their own.  It would be tantamount to a random civil engineer trotting
the blueprints to the Golden Gate bridge out as their own design.  The
social and professional repercussions would be immediate, highly
negative and totally incompatible with the motivation for contributing
to FOSS systems.

I'd like to get an idea of what the major concerns are surrounding
"plagiarism" and FOSS.

l. Is it that you believe the John Q Software is going to rip off your
software and represent it as their own work.  That would be plagiarism
and I think very very rare in the FOSS community.

2. Are you unhappy with the fact that a few of the major distros are
charging money for support and representing the software itself as their
own creation?  Wouldn't that already be in contravention of GPL V2?  Are
you unhappy with the fact that some distros make *a lot* of money and
fail to credit the FOSS people that made it possible?  Arguably the
market determines whether their support and package integration are
worthy of financial support, just as the DOD determines whether V4 is
worth of their support.  The relative discrepancy in reward vs. effort
is an economic discussion beyond the scope of this.

3. Is it that you simply want an efficient mechanism for cataloging
efforts of the major contributors to a project?  If that's the case why
don't we just come up with some sort of credits standard to be macro
embedded in the binaries?  That way anyone could view the credits by
running a 'credits' shell command against the binary/library/kernel etc.
Obviously the macros would be viewable in source.

4. How about this for a self-referential solution to the problem.  In
ReiserV4, you could view the ReiserV4 credits by simply looking at the
credits meta properties in reiser4.o or any other software.  Sounds like
a good idea for a plugin or default behavior.  The ability to view
credits like this might make software engineers recommend V4 for this
reason alone.   ;-)

5. It would probably be easy enough to put hooks in the Gnome and KDE
help subsystems so that the Help/Credits menu item would scan the binary
for attributions.

6. I've said this before, but if the 'credits' program doesn't find the
exact 'attributions' structure in the binary, it can do a multi-part
diff/MD5 and then match it to the closest known version.  This algorithm
might be similar to the rsync or advanced binary diff algorithms.  That
way if there are no attribution macros or someone intentionally strips
or alters attributions you could track it.  I'm sure some digital
signature technique could be used to guarantee non-alteration.  What if
the team members each digitally signed the their source modules?

Anyway, these are all possible technical solutions to a human problem.
People would like attribution for the hard work they do.  Naturally.

Is there a better mechanism?

Hopefully the issue doesn't devolve into an argument about forcing
people to read the credits, nagware like, during the execution of the
code.  That would simply not scale at all and would aggressively
de-select your software free or otherwise from an open environment.

Think about it,

(1) Everytime the kernel invokes kmod, the kmod team brays about how
great they are.
(2) Everytime someone opens a dynamic library, it shouts about how great
it is.
(3) Everytime your email program starts up, it delays for 20 seconds
while it advertises for the team.  Of course if you buy support, this
message goes away.  Hmmm....
(4) Everytime a particular SMTP service starts up it announces it's
version and a random contributor.  For people trying to hack into
systems, this is very bad as it can be used to determine whether there
are vulnerabilities.
(5) By this time, we begin experiencing a very low coefficient of static
friction on the development slope.

There has to be a better way, or FOSS software wouldn't exist.

In short, can you guys give some real examples where developers
intentions have been abused or are likely to be abused by GPL V2?

Thanks,

jim burnes


 

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 130+ messages in thread
* RE: Fwd: reiser4 non-free?
@ 2004-05-07 15:51 Dawson, Larry
  2004-05-07 16:26 ` Hans Reiser
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 130+ messages in thread
From: Dawson, Larry @ 2004-05-07 15:51 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Hans Reiser, Brian Thomas Sniffen; +Cc: MJ Ray, debian-legal, reiserfs-list



Hans Reiser wrote
 
> Brian Thomas Sniffen wrote:
> 
> >MJ Ray <mjr@dsl.pipex.com> writes:
> >
> >  
> >
> >>>You seem to understand the difference between credit and
> >>>advertisement as advertisements are credits for those you dislike.
> >>>      
> >>>
> >>You seem to understand the difference between modification and
> >>plagiarism as plagiarism is a modification that you dislike 
> because it
> >>doesn't praise you enough.
> >>    
> >>
> >
> >To be fair, these credits really do seem to be for others.  Some of
> >them are credits *and* ads, and at least one is an ad for work for
> >Hans Reiser and Namesys, but they are credits as well, and most of
> >them for other people.
> >
> >-Brian
> >
> >  
> >
> I could be talked into eliminating the one for me, though I 
> have always 
> found it a bit of a pain that people
> are a bit eager to think that I am some sort of businessman who hired 
> russians because he wasn't abstractly inclined himself.  They seem to 
> think I am some sort of businessman fool enough to invest into free 
> software, rather than a guy who wanted to build something and 
> couldn't 
> get anyone to fund it so he paid for reiserfs to come into 
> existence by 
> working a day job for 5.5 years.  They often don't realize that I am 
> responsible for basic architectural features, like the idea of 
> aggregating small files together rather than always page 
> aligning them, 
> or that the most controversial deep design changes of V4 
> versus V3 were 
> mine. 

Personally, when I read the info on Namesys.com I assumed Hans
had designed pretty much all of Reiser 4. It was only later when I read (I can't remember precisely where) a page where Hans credited members of his team that I knew that others had contributed a lot. I will continue to credit Hans with a massive contribution to filesystem theory and practise. Credit for their work should be given freely :-)
Looking at a couple of lines of information about contributers each time I use ReiserFS progs is just not a problem for me - but it also seems plain to me that restricting changes to the source means that they cannot be put in debian. The license restriction is not compatible with the GPL.
Since the actual Reiser4 filesystem is fully free and GPL licensed, can debian include it without the Reiser programs? If some one wants to write GPL compatible reiserfs progs later then all is available "free" - so this does not seem to put the debian social contract in a complete bind. For now, obviously, a user is going to have to use the non-gpl-compatible (and hence non-debian) utilities to create a filesystem, and contributers to it will be credited.
 
> Probably the current one mentioning me needs more work, as it doesn't 
> really say all this, sigh.
 

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 130+ messages in thread
* RE: Fwd: reiser4 non-free?
@ 2004-05-07 16:40 Dawson, Larry
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 130+ messages in thread
From: Dawson, Larry @ 2004-05-07 16:40 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Hans Reiser; +Cc: Brian Thomas Sniffen, MJ Ray, debian-legal, reiserfs-list



Hans Reiser wrote
> 
> Dawson, Larry wrote:
> 
> >Hans Reiser wrote
> > 
> >  
> >
> >>Brian Thomas Sniffen wrote:
> >>
> >>    
> >>
> >>>MJ Ray <mjr@dsl.pipex.com> writes:
> >>>
> >>> 
> >>>
> >>>      
> >>>
> >>>>>You seem to understand the difference between credit and
> >>>>>advertisement as advertisements are credits for those 
> you dislike.
> >>>>>     
> >>>>>
> >>>>>          
> >>>>>
> >>>>You seem to understand the difference between modification and
> >>>>plagiarism as plagiarism is a modification that you dislike 
> >>>>        
> >>>>
> >>because it
> >>    
> >>
> >>>>doesn't praise you enough.
> >>>>   
> >>>>
> >>>>        
> >>>>
> >>>To be fair, these credits really do seem to be for others.  Some of
> >>>them are credits *and* ads, and at least one is an ad for work for
> >>>Hans Reiser and Namesys, but they are credits as well, and most of
> >>>them for other people.
> >>>
> >>>-Brian
> >>>
> >>> 
> >>>
> >>>      
> >>>
> >>I could be talked into eliminating the one for me, though I 
> >>have always 
> >>found it a bit of a pain that people
> >>are a bit eager to think that I am some sort of businessman 
> who hired 
> >>russians because he wasn't abstractly inclined himself.  
> They seem to 
> >>think I am some sort of businessman fool enough to invest into free 
> >>software, rather than a guy who wanted to build something and 
> >>couldn't 
> >>get anyone to fund it so he paid for reiserfs to come into 
> >>existence by 
> >>working a day job for 5.5 years.  They often don't realize 
> that I am 
> >>responsible for basic architectural features, like the idea of 
> >>aggregating small files together rather than always page 
> >>aligning them, 
> >>or that the most controversial deep design changes of V4 
> >>versus V3 were 
> >>mine. 
> >>    
> >>
> >
> >Personally, when I read the info on Namesys.com I assumed Hans
> >had designed pretty much all of Reiser 4.
> >
> Most people don't read Namesys.com, they only know about the 
> name of the 
> filesystem, and the credits are very much needed in mkreiser4 
> to inform 
> them.  In those credits, I am just one of the randomly chosen 
> developers/sponsors.
> 
> Probably I should put the developer credits somewhere on the namesys 
> main page rather than just under the developers button.  Thanks for 
> pointing that out.
> 
> > It was only later when I read (I can't remember precisely 
> where) a page where Hans credited members of his team that I 
> knew that others had contributed a lot. I will continue to 
> credit Hans with a massive contribution to filesystem theory 
> and practise. Credit for their work should be given freely :-)
> >Looking at a couple of lines of information about 
> contributers each time I use ReiserFS progs is just not a 
> problem for me - but it also seems plain to me that 
> restricting changes to the source means that they cannot be 
> put in debian. The license restriction is not compatible with the GPL.
> >Since the actual Reiser4 filesystem is fully free and GPL 
> licensed, can debian include it without the Reiser programs? 
> If some one wants to write GPL compatible reiserfs progs 
> later then all is available "free" - so this does not seem to 
> put the debian social contract in a complete bind. For now, 
> obviously, a user is going to have to use the 
> non-gpl-compatible (and hence non-debian) utilities to create 
> a filesystem, and contributers to it will be credited.
> >  
> >
> Do you really think that there exists some moron willing to spend 4-5 
> man-years just so that debian can freely eliminate mention of 
> who built 
> reiser4?

No I don't, and I agree it would be wasteful to do, (and of no useful value, to me). But it is possible, so I was hoping debian would see the possibility as freedom enough to include the reiser4 filesystem. I want them to include reiser 4, but it seems impossible to include the reiser progs given your licensing requirements.


> 
> > 
> >  
> >
> >>Pr
> >>
> >  
> >
> 
> 

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 130+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2004-05-12 13:31 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 130+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2004-04-24 19:32 Fwd: reiser4 non-free? Domenico Andreoli
2004-04-25 16:13 ` MJ Ray
2004-04-30  4:50 ` Hans Reiser
2004-04-30  5:56   ` Don Armstrong
2004-04-30 11:48     ` Hans Reiser
2004-04-30 14:12       ` Jeremy Hankins
2004-04-30 15:33         ` Carl-Daniel Hailfinger
2004-04-30 16:52           ` Hans Reiser
2004-04-30 16:58           ` Jeremy Hankins
2004-05-01 19:40           ` Steve Langasek
2004-04-30 17:07         ` David Masover
2004-04-30 17:58           ` Hubert Chan
2004-04-30 22:53             ` David Masover
2004-05-02 19:46           ` MJ Ray
2004-04-30 15:13       ` Scott James Remnant
2004-04-30 17:43       ` Don Armstrong
2004-05-02 21:02         ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-02 21:55           ` Don Armstrong
2004-05-02 22:37             ` Martin List-Petersen
2004-05-03 17:04               ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-03 17:19                 ` Martin List-Petersen
2004-05-03 17:30                   ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-03  6:58             ` mjt
2004-05-03 17:11               ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-03 17:21                 ` mjt
2004-05-03 17:35                   ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-03 17:49                     ` mjt
2004-05-03 18:00                       ` Chris Dukes
2004-05-04 16:01                         ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-04 17:57                           ` Martin Dickopp
2004-05-04 15:50                       ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-04 19:43                         ` mjt
2004-05-03 22:25               ` Valdis.Kletnieks
2004-05-03 16:35             ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-03 18:16               ` Mahesh T. Pai
2004-05-03 18:55               ` Don Armstrong
2004-05-03 23:06               ` MJ Ray
2004-05-03 21:33           ` MJ Ray
2004-05-03 21:53             ` Carl-Daniel Hailfinger
2004-05-04  0:00               ` MJ Ray
2004-05-04  7:52                 ` Carl-Daniel Hailfinger
2004-05-04 16:20                   ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-04 16:45                     ` MJ Ray
2004-05-04 17:02                       ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-04 17:38                         ` MJ Ray
2004-05-04 17:47                           ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-04 18:15                             ` MJ Ray
2004-05-06 18:53                               ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-06 19:00                                 ` Nikita Danilov
2004-05-06 19:14                                   ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-06 19:22                                   ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-06 21:19                                 ` MJ Ray
2004-05-06 23:21                                   ` Brian Thomas Sniffen
2004-05-06 23:29                                     ` MJ Ray
2004-05-07  7:04                                     ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-04 18:00                         ` Brian Thomas Sniffen
2004-05-06  2:52                           ` David Masover
2004-05-06 12:32                             ` Walter Landry
2004-05-06 13:44                               ` Brian Thomas Sniffen
2004-05-06 14:36                                 ` Domenico Andreoli
2004-05-06 16:35                                   ` Valdis.Kletnieks
2004-05-06 16:43                                   ` Brian Thomas Sniffen
2004-05-06 18:10                                     ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-06 18:42                                       ` Matthew Garrett
2004-05-06 18:59                                         ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-06 23:16                                           ` Steve Langasek
2004-05-06 23:18                                           ` Brian Thomas Sniffen
2004-05-07 18:18                                           ` Raul Miller
2004-05-06 22:55                                       ` Brian Thomas Sniffen
2004-05-07  1:21                                         ` Jeremy Hankins
2004-05-07  2:12                                           ` Brian Thomas Sniffen
2004-05-12 13:31                                             ` Jeremy Hankins
2004-05-07  6:47                                         ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-08 13:50                                           ` Sami Liedes
2004-05-06 23:23                                       ` Matthew Palmer
2004-05-06 23:40                                         ` Raul Miller
2004-05-07  0:15                                           ` Stefan Traby
2004-05-10 17:15                                           ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-10 17:20                                             ` Raul Miller
2004-05-07 16:14                                         ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-09  7:08                                           ` Matthew Palmer
2004-05-06 18:41                                     ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-06 19:40                                       ` Stefan Traby
2004-05-04 18:57                         ` Fwd: " Jeremy Hankins
2004-05-06 19:34                           ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-06 19:49                             ` Chris Dukes
2004-05-06 19:54                               ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-06 19:56                                 ` Chris Dukes
2004-05-06 20:02                                   ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-04 17:20                     ` Martin Michlmayr
2004-05-04 17:40                       ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-04 17:54                       ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-04 18:44                         ` Joe Wreschnig
2004-05-06 18:58                           ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-10 17:59                     ` Branden Robinson
2004-04-30 12:02     ` Hans Reiser
2004-04-30 13:25       ` Fwd: reiser4 non-free? [OT] evilninja
2004-04-30 13:34       ` Fwd: reiser4 non-free? MJ Ray
2004-05-03 14:24         ` Claus Färber
2004-05-04  9:56           ` MJ Ray
2004-05-10 18:15             ` Branden Robinson
2004-04-30 12:20   ` Walter Landry
2004-04-30 14:55     ` Narcoleptic Electron
2004-04-30  8:34 ` Fwd: " Stewart Smith
2004-04-30 18:15   ` Steve Langasek
2004-05-02 18:51     ` Hans Reiser
2004-04-30 16:26 ` Michael Milverton
2004-04-30 16:56   ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-01  5:02     ` Michael Milverton
2004-05-02 19:12       ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-02 21:03         ` Stefan Traby
2004-04-30 16:56   ` MJ Ray
2004-04-30 17:13     ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-02 19:42       ` MJ Ray
2004-05-02 19:55         ` Hans Reiser
2004-04-30 17:23   ` Jason Stubbs
2004-04-30 22:39     ` David Masover
2004-05-03 22:15       ` Valdis.Kletnieks
2004-05-04  2:07         ` David Masover
2004-05-02 17:03     ` Hans Reiser
  -- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
2004-05-03 17:41 Burnes, James
2004-05-03 17:45 ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-03 18:38 ` Martin List-Petersen
     [not found] <A69517E67905B6429D57AA9EB6C86E6855266A@haynesmail.haynes-group.com>
2004-05-03 20:16 ` Tim Donahue
2004-05-04 19:18 Burnes, James
2004-05-05  3:11 ` Michael Milverton
2004-05-05 20:10   ` mjt
2004-05-07 15:51 Dawson, Larry
2004-05-07 16:26 ` Hans Reiser
2004-05-07 16:40 Dawson, Larry

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