Ok, the situation is a bit better than I thought... This is the
license governing code samples from the msdn blog - I believe if I
insert this in the affected file, it's good.

I've cc'd legal-discuss for an opinion.

-Steve


MICROSOFT LIMITED PUBLIC LICENSE

This license governs use of code marked as "sample" available on this
Web Site without a License Agreement , as provided under the Section
above titled " NOTICE SPECIFIC TO SOFTWARE AVAILABLE ON THIS WEB SITE
". If you use such code (the "software"), you accept this license. If
you do not accept the license, do not use the software.

1. Definitions

The terms "reproduce," "reproduction," "derivative works," and
"distribution" have the same meaning here as under U.S. copyright law.

A "contribution" is the original software, or any additions or changes
to the software.

A "contributor" is any person that distributes its contribution under
this license.

 "Licensed patents" are a contributor's patent claims that read
directly on its contribution.

2. Grant of Rights

(A) Copyright Grant- Subject to the terms of this license, including
the license conditions and limitations in section 3, each contributor
grants you a non-exclusive, worldwide, royalty-free copyright license
to reproduce its contribution, prepare derivative works of its
contribution, and distribute its contribution or any derivative works
that you create.

(B) Patent Grant- Subject to the terms of this license, including the
license conditions and limitations in section 3, each contributor
grants you a non-exclusive, worldwide, royalty-free license under its
licensed patents to make, have made, use, sell, offer for sale,
import, and/or otherwise dispose of its contribution in the software
or derivative works of the contribution in the software.

3. Conditions and Limitations

 (A) No Trademark License- This license does not grant you rights to
use any contributors' name, logo, or trademarks.

(B) If you bring a patent claim against any contributor over patents
that you claim are infringed by the software, your patent license from
such contributor to the software ends automatically.

(C) If you distribute any portion of the software, you must retain all
copyright, patent, trademark, and attribution notices that are present
in the software.

(D) If you distribute any portion of the software in source code form,
you may do so only under this license by including a complete copy of
this license with your distribution. If you distribute any portion of
the software in compiled or object code form, you may only do so under
a license that complies with this license.

(E) The software is licensed "as-is." You bear the risk of using it.
The contributors give no express warranties, guarantees or conditions.
You may have additional consumer rights under your local laws which
this license cannot change. To the extent permitted under your local
laws, the contributors exclude the implied warranties of
merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose and
non-infringement.

(F) Platform Limitation- The licenses granted in sections 2(A) & 2(B)
extend only to the software or derivative works that you create that
run on a Microsoft Windows operating system product.


> -----Original Message-----
> From: Steve Huston [mailto:shus...@riverace.com] 
> Sent: Friday, June 05, 2009 8:55 AM
> To: 'dev@qpid.apache.org'
> Subject: RE: Recently checked in Windows code
> 
> 
> Hi Andrew,
> 
> > I have some concerns about the copyright/licensing of the 
> > following new checked in file:
> 
> I understand... First, the code I checked in is not from the 
> cited source - it changed along the way and I didn't update 
> the attribution. However, the code that _is_ in the file is 
> adapted from an MSDN blog posting - I'll check out what 
> license, if any, applies to it and resolve as needed.
> 
> Sorry for the sloppiness. I'll get it resolved ASAP.
> 
> -Steve
> 
> > ------------------------- cpp/src/tests/background.ps1
> > -------------------------
> > # From
> > http://ps1.soapyfrog.com/2007/01/22/running-pipelines-in-the-b
> ackground/
> # Copyright C 2006-2009 Adrian Milliner
> ...
> 
> I couldn't tell if any of the code in the file is lifted from the
> website mentioned but the license on the page there is 
> Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 2.5 License.
> 
> In any event this code needs to have an apache license on it if it's
> original, but if the code is directly lifted from a website under
this
> CC license is it compatible with the apache licensing?
> 
> Steve can you comment on the originality of the code?
> 
> Sorry to be a pain, but the correct licensing of our code is 
> important.
> 
> Andrew
> 
> 


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