Dave Crossland dixit:

>2. Whose source code is Free/Open Source, as defined by both the FSF
>Free Software Definition and OSI Open Source Definition and is
>available to the users of the service. (The FSF and OSI maintain
>example lists of licenses that meet their definitions)

Thanks, that sounds great.

bye,
//mirabilos
-- 
Sometimes they [people] care too much: pretty printers [and syntax highligh-
ting, d.A.] mechanically produce pretty output that accentuates irrelevant
detail in the program, which is as sensible as putting all the prepositions
in English text in bold font.   -- Rob Pike in "Notes on Programming in C"

_______________________________________________
okfn-discuss mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.okfn.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/okfn-discuss

Reply via email to