• infeeeee@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Some icons of the undergrounds have different license. Read your first link carefully. And you link the source of the ui, or you don’t consider png files as “source”?

      If it wouldn’t be foss, it couldn’t be built by the f-droid build system, it can only build foss projects

      Edit: i was wrong

        • infeeeee@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          Aha, I see, you can consider it whatever you want, maybe the “not fully free software” would be a better term, but “not open source” is too harsh, because source is open, as you can see it, but doesn’t fit the definition of Free Software as defined by FSF. If you use requirements by FSF, please use their terminology as well, it’s confusing.

          Also please contact FSF, because they recommend this non-free app on their website: https://directory.fsf.org/wiki/Collection:Replicant-expanded#Navigation

      • FOSS Is Fun@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        The license contains the following clause:

        • UI Design and UX work, such as layout and icons, are covered by CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0

        That’s why I linked the folder Osmand/tree/master/OsmAnd/res. It contains icons and XML files, which are used to describe the UI.

        CC-BY-NC-ND is a non-free license. It forbids commercial redistribution and it doesn’t allow any modification of the files. OsmAnd further restricts what you can do, as it does not allow redistribution in the most popular app stores without permission.

        If it wouldn’t be foss, it couldn’t be built by the f-droid build system, it can only build foss projects

        The source files are publicly available, so F-Droid can use them to build the app, but the license restricts what you can do with these files.

        F-Droid does not sell the app (non-commercial clause), is not modifying it (non-derivative clause) and is not listed as one of the restricted app stores, so it can distribute the app. But this does not make the app free and open-source software.