Good morning, Paul. Thanks for the explanation.
On Sun, Apr 7, 2024 at 8:08 AM Paul Smith <psm...@gnu.org> wrote: > In short, if you create a new file and assign it to the FSF then you > can still do whatever you want with that file, including even use a > completely proprietary license for it. i am intending to include that file to a library of mine which is released under the bsd license. Usually, souch source code file would contain something like /* * Copyright (c) 2017 Dmitry Goncharov * * Distributed under the BSD License. * (See accompanying file COPYING). */ Do i understand it correctly, that in my copy of this new file that is assigned to the FSF, i'll remove the copyright part and the header becomes /* * Distributed under the BSD License. * (See accompanying file COPYING). */ and whoever is using that library can keep using it under the BSD license? regards, Dmitry