PMA <peterarmstr...@aya.yale.edu> writes: > Oh -- all *my* compositions. Sorry, I should have thought to specify > this.
Well, you said you don't care about royalties. So apparently what you do care about is artistic integrity. The question is how you can achieve your goals while providing a maximum of usefulness to others. First you need to note that your artistic integrity is not preserved by hiding the source code. If anybody is interested in plagiarizing your work, he can just scan and retypeset it. The only thing that prevents this is using a suitable license for _all_ forms of the work, including the PDF. I don't know the usual artistic licenses, but even a license intended for pure program code like the GPL has a clause: 5. Conveying Modified Source Versions. You may convey a work based on the Program, or the modifications to produce it from the Program, in the form of source code under the terms of section 4, provided that you also meet all of these conditions: a) The work must carry prominent notices stating that you modified it, and giving a relevant date. The GFDL (a document license) states: 4. MODIFICATIONS You may copy and distribute a Modified Version of the Document under the conditions of sections 2 and 3 above, provided that you release the Modified Version under precisely this License, with the Modified Version filling the role of the Document, thus licensing distribution and modification of the Modified Version to whoever possesses a copy of it. In addition, you must do these things in the Modified Version: A. Use in the Title Page (and on the covers, if any) a title distinct from that of the Document, and from those of previous versions (which should, if there were any, be listed in the History section of the Document). You may use the same title as a previous version if the original publisher of that version gives permission. B. List on the Title Page, as authors, one or more persons or entities responsible for authorship of the modifications in the Modified Version, together with at least five of the principal authors of the Document (all of its principal authors, if it has fewer than five), unless they release you from this requirement. C. State on the Title page the name of the publisher of the Modified Version, as the publisher. D. Preserve all the copyright notices of the Document. E. Add an appropriate copyright notice for your modifications adjacent to the other copyright notices. F. Include, immediately after the copyright notices, a license notice giving the public permission to use the Modified Version under the terms of this License, in the form shown in the Addendum below. G. Preserve in that license notice the full lists of Invariant Sections and required Cover Texts given in the Document's license notice. H. Include an unaltered copy of this License. I. Preserve the section Entitled "History", Preserve its Title, and add to it an item stating at least the title, year, new authors, and publisher of the Modified Version as given on the Title Page. If there is no section Entitled "History" in the Document, create one stating the title, year, authors, and publisher of the Document as given on its Title Page, then add an item describing the Modified Version as stated in the previous sentence. J. Preserve the network location, if any, given in the Document for public access to a Transparent copy of the Document, and likewise the network locations given in the Document for previous versions it was based on. These may be placed in the "History" section. You may omit a network location for a work that was published at least four years before the Document itself, or if the original publisher of the version it refers to gives permission. K. For any section Entitled "Acknowledgements" or "Dedications", Preserve the Title of the section, and preserve in the section all the substance and tone of each of the contributor acknowledgements and/or dedications given therein. L. Preserve all the Invariant Sections of the Document, unaltered in their text and in their titles. Section numbers or the equivalent are not considered part of the section titles. M. Delete any section Entitled "Endorsements". Such a section may not be included in the Modified Version. N. Do not retitle any existing section to be Entitled "Endorsements" or to conflict in title with any Invariant Section. O. Preserve any Warranty Disclaimers. [...] Now of course, legalese is tiresome. But I think that there are probably existing boilerplate licenses that capture the desire of what you want and not want to be possible to do with your work better than your plan of just putting up PDFs without thinking much about the license. This concerns in what forms your work will live on (and the normal copyright conditions lock down everything that is not explicitly allowed for one lifetime after your death, after which it is completely free for the taking. Perhaps you want to have more of an influence on its fate than this default provides). With regard to LilyPond, a recurring question is "how do I deal with the problems of real-life music typesetting". Serious complete examples help a lot here, not just because of their musical content. Serious complete examples also help in benchmarking and tuning LilyPond for production work. "Valentin's opera" does not get updated while LilyPond evolves. If your work was worth writing, it will certainly also be worth thinking about the form in which you consider it best to make it available. All the best -- David Kastrup _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user