Sujet : Re: Does Dimdows Know What Time It Is?
De : bowman (at) *nospam* montana.com (rbowman)
Groupes : comp.os.linux.advocacyDate : 04. Oct 2024, 08:36:24
Autres entêtes
Message-ID : <lm9k7oFt2vgU1@mid.individual.net>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
User-Agent : Pan/0.149 (Bellevue; 4c157ba)
On Fri, 4 Oct 2024 07:02:28 -0000 (UTC), Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
I’m not sure about the legalities of dual-licensing. If you look at
licences like the GPL, they have wording that says “if you don’t accept
this licence, then you don’t have permission to use the software”. That
kind of precludes getting that permission via an alternative licence ...
I misspoke. Perl has the Artistic License not the Poetic License
https://dev.perl.org/licenses/"It is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the
terms of either:
a) the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software
Foundation; either version 1, or (at your option) any later version, or
b) the "Artistic License".
For those of you that choose to use the GNU General Public License, my
interpretation of the GNU General Public License is that no Perl script
falls under the terms of the GPL unless you explicitly put said script
under the terms of the GPL yourself."
Larry Wall
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MIT_LicenseThe MIT No Attribution and BSD Zero Clause are essentially public domain
like free software was distributed prior to Stallman. There is nothing in
either to prevent you from calling it GPL like Wall said. The reverse is
not true; software released under GPL can't become BSD Zero Clause.