On Wed, Dec 1, 2010 at 5:16 AM, strk <s...@keybit.net> wrote: > > Why not LGPL ? > > As per "usual", freshmeat finds 276 projects written in Ruby, > with their licenses: > > GPL: 90 > MIT/X: 43 > BSD Revised: 33 > LGPL: 28 > GPLv3: 18 > ..... > > http://freshmeat.net/search?page=1&q=ruby&submit=Search&with=800&without= >
The MIT license is sort of the trending license for Ruby projects these days, if you will. I think Rails started the trend, as its major components are all MIT licensed, as are many of the more popular Ruby-based projects like Phusion Passenger, Bundler, rspec, gemcutter, jeweler... on my system for instance, out of the 276 gems I have installed (strange coincidence), approximately 207 gems appear to be using the MIT license after some grepping around. ("Approximately", as the license information seems to be omitted from the gemspecs way more often than not, so my grepping was done using portions of the text of the license itself and the phrase "MIT licen[sc]e".) Anyways, when in Rome and all that... Raw numbers aside, we also like the simple terms of the license and its permissive nature. _______________________________________________ geos-devel mailing list geos-devel@lists.osgeo.org http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/geos-devel