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| Date: | -- (:) |
| From: | Dave Berry <daveb@h...> |
| Subject: | Re: licence issues |
At 19:53 19/04/99 +0200, Pierre Weis wrote: >You are right, but you know, nowadays, it's a kind of a religious war: >you must have been baptized under the GPL to be declared a ``free'' >man (sorry, I meant software). I find the most useful definition is not "free software", but "Open Source software". This has a broader definition than just GNU. If you look at http://www.opensource.org/osd.html, you'll see both the accepted definition of "Open Source", and links to several example licenses. This is the definition used by Linux distributors, which gives some practical incentive to adopt an Open Source licence. It is, of course, up to you whether you want to make O'Caml "Open Source", in this sense. (My apologies if you already know this). Dave. Languages Group Manager. Harlequin Ltd., Lismore House, 127 George St, Edinburgh, EH2 4JN, UK. Tel: +44 131 240 6106.