On Fri, Apr 02, 2004 at 02:19:57AM -0500, Branden Robinson wrote: > On Thu, Apr 01, 2004 at 11:11:43AM +0200, Sven Luther wrote: > > > > This would be a good solution. What about the later Apple licence ? > > > > > > If we can get it under the MIT/X11 license it doesn't matter what other > > > licenses it's under. The MIT/X11 license is non-exclusive. > > > > Well, i ask, because apple may be more inclined to use a licence they > > have experience with. > > 2-clause BSD, as used by the NetBSD Foundation, would be good, too.
Er. Be careful with this statement. The Foundation's policy has varied between at least (that I *know* of) 2 and 4 clause licenses. Their widespread use of the 4-clause for a time is part of the conversations with them about the kernel source, among other things. Not that 2-clause isn't good; more that folks shouldn't assume that just any random thing with the NetBSD copyright on it is 2-clause, unless it does in fact appear to be a 2-clause license. Yes, this *should* be obvious, but I've run into folks who seem to forget this detail... (ah, the joys of trying to hunt down upstreams who haven't been seen in over a decade, some of whom now are now CTOs with battalions of secretaries to keep them from being bothered...) -- Joel Baker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ,''`. Debian GNU/NetBSD(i386) porter : :' : `. `' `-
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