On Tue, 2016-06-07 at 14:35 +0200, Arnt Karlsen wrote: > ..11 years with Groklaw.net has thaught me to be a little harsher; > you cannot "port" a program written under one license (MIT), under > another license, unless that first license has language that allows > such "relicensing" under other licensing terms.
MIT is permissive. It can be relicensed into GPL fairly easily, much like LibreOffice took the similar Apache licensed OpenOffice into the CopyLeft. It made for a one way gate, new code added to OpenOffice could still freely move to LibreOffice while innovation occurring on the LibreOffice tree could not go back to OpenOffice. OpenOffice is now pretty much a moribund project. It isn't the friendliest move, but it can be done. I'd suggest Mr. Chung study the license files in the LibreOffice package. But first try for a peaceful arrangement with the original author; just because something is legal doesn't mean it is the recommended action. If there is ever to be a hope of cooperating with the original author both efforts need to be using a license you can both live with.
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