As you may already be aware, the Evergreen Documentation Interest Group is 
working toward creating a set of "Official" community driven documentation for 
Evergreen, using the DocBook standard to produce both HTML and PDF versions, as 
well as distributing DocBook XML files for customization purposes.  

We've been discussing licensing issues for this documentation effort, but 
wanted to get input on this important issue from the larger Evergreen 
community.  Specifically, we're trying to decide which license or licenses to 
apply to our documentation efforts.  It seems the general feeling is that we'd 
like a copyleft license, but which one remains to be determined.

The candidates we've considered include Creative Commons Share-Alike (CCSA), 
GNU Free Documentation License (FDL), and the GNU General Public License (GPL). 
 We've heard from various sources that the CCSA and the FDL are not compatible 
with the GPL (under which the Evergreen Software is licensed), which would seem 
to make them unusable for our purposes.  Do you agree or disagree with this 
conclusion?

The GNU GPL would seem to be compatible with itself, but it's my understanding 
that it is intended for use with software, not documentation.  But perhaps it 
could be used for our documentation anyway?

So... thoughts from the community?  What licenses do other open source projects 
you know of use for their documentation?  What license(s) do you think we 
should license Evergreen documentation under, and why?  

Any input would be appreciated.

Thanks,
Karen Collier
Evergreen Documentation Interest Group Co-Facilitator

-- 
Karen Collier
Public Services Librarian
Kent County Public Library
408 High Street
Chestertown, MD 21620
410-778-3636

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