Hi, On Tue, 2004-10-26 at 19:58, Casey Marshall wrote: > The test suite was developed by the US government, so it is not > subject to copyright. > > Parts were contracted out by the NSA, but it seems that they have > stated that the test files are freely redistributable [1]. Please add the following text from that to the README: The test document and data were jointly developed by NIST and DigitalNet. Any contribution made to this project by NIST is covered by Title 17 Section 105 of the United States Code which states that any work developed by the United State Government is not subject to copyright protection (see http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/105.html). So, NIST's contributions to the test documentation and data are in the public domain. While DigitalNet's contributions to the documentation and data may be subject to copyright, all of the work done by DigitalNet on this project was done under contract for NSA. So, it would be up to NSA to decide how DigitalNet's contributions to the project could be used. In response to your query, I asked DigitalNet about the use of the test suite and received the following response: "V51 [of NSA] approved of the public release of the PKITS test data and documents. There are no restrictions regarding their redistribution." when you add this data. Although we are more relaxed about accepting contributions to Mauve than with for example GNU Classpath (for which we require written confirmation by all contributors) we still want to have a record who contributed what when. This can be done in the ChangeLog and the README file though. Even if it wouldn't be a very big disaster if we ever have to remove a test from mauve we should try to prevent ever having to be in such a situation and prevent any unclearity about the origins of any of the tests. Thanks, Mark