El dj 21 de 01 de 2010 a les 14:49 -0500, en/na Robert Frederking va
escriure:
> The Language Technologies Institute (LTI) of Carnegie Mellon University's
> School of Computer Science (CMU SCS) is making publicly available the
> Haitian Creole spoken and text data that we have collected or produced. We
> are providing this data with minimal restrictions in order to
> allow others to develop language technology for Haiti, in parallel with our
> own efforts to help with this crisis. Since organizing the data in a useful
> fashion is not instantaneous, and more text data is currently being 
> produced
> by collaborators, we will be publishing the data incrementally on the web,
> as it becomes available.  To access the currently available data, please
> visit the website at  http://www.speech.cs.cmu.edu/haitian/

Would you consider also dual/triple licensing the data under an existing
free software licence, such as the MIT licence[1] or the GNU GPL[2] ?
This way it could be combined with existing data under these licences
(e.g. the majority of free/open-source software) and researchers and
developers don't need to hire legal advice to determine if they can
combine their work with yours.

Best regards, 

Fran

1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MIT_Licence#License_terms
2. http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html

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