Forgot to mention: of course I feel flattered by you mentioning me as
copyright holder, but I'd rather see you use the VOLK project as source.
I made that "being a part of the project" :)
Cheers,
marcus
On 25.05.2016 17:20, Marcus Müller wrote:
> Hi Raj,
>
> Ben is absolutely right. Feel free to
Hi Raj,
Ben is absolutely right. Feel free to use the logo in your presentations.
Rationale: I made that logo so that people could associate something
visible with VOLK. Now, having a logo that no-one uses is pretty much
stupid, hence, you should feel more than welcome to use it, especially
when
Hi Raj -
Thanks so much for checking! We really appreciate it. Yes, you may use the
logo for that purpose.
We intend to get a page up on the new website that clearly lays out the
various licenses used for GNU Radio IP, but haven't gotten around to it,
yet. Your e-mail is a good example of why thi
Indeed.
I updated the footer to point to the correct license and clarified that the
logo is copyright Marcus. Obviously he has licensed it for purposes of this
website. We had a brief conversation about it a few minutes ago in which I
don't think we had an agreement on what the license for the log
As it happens, I designed that logo; it's not necessarily under the same
license as the website.
Now I'm curious: what's your plan? What do you want to do with that logo?
Best regards,
Marcus
On 24.05.2016 21:38, Raj Bhattacharjea wrote:
> The VOLK website claims it's contents are licensed under
The VOLK website claims it's contents are licensed under "Creative Commons
Attribution-NoDerivs 4.0 International", however, the license link actually
takes you to the text of the "Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0
International".
These are different licenses and the difference is whethe