On Tue, 2012-02-14 at 23:01 +0100, Stephan Bergmann wrote: > On 02/14/2012 10:39 PM, Josh Heidenreich wrote: > > Do we need licence blocks in a README? Can we just write the licence in > > on all pages generated by the script? > > My (naive?) take on it is that, technically, all the files committed to > the git repo are "source files" that should have a legal header.
I think that's rather an over-conservative approach ;-) Certainly, everything that is included in the end-product needs cast-iron legal provenance, but the excessive and un-necessary presence of legal boiler-plate everywhere makes this horribly ugly IMHO. That's particularly true for a few lines of README, committed by people who have made broad licensing commitments anyway :-) And even more particularly when using source code licenses for things that are not source code ;-) Personally, seeing that hideous Oracle (C) and vast ugly license block intruding into our world, I'm tempted to junk and re-write the text from scratch to avoid having that stuff borking up our nice new, clean README system :-) If we want to retain the text, we could move that README away again I think. ATB, Michael. -- michael.me...@suse.com <><, Pseudo Engineer, itinerant idiot _______________________________________________ LibreOffice mailing list LibreOffice@lists.freedesktop.org http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/libreoffice