You can back out pyc's pretty easy.  See the "byteplay" package. :)
--Matthew Goodman

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On Fri, Feb 18, 2011 at 2:26 PM, Eviatar <eviatarb...@gmail.com> wrote:

> On Feb 18, 10:26 am, rjf <fate...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > On Feb 18, 8:51 am, William Stein <wst...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > FUD?
> > It seems to me that if I were writing useful/important code that
> > paying
> > $100 would not be such a bad idea, though I agree that "free" would be
> > "better".  I would have reservations though if the university gave me
> > a "free" copy but told me that any program that I wrote using it could
> > never be sold by me to anyone.  It would have to be owned by the
> > university
> > (as work for hire), sometimes a university policy.  Or it would have
> > to
> > be given away free (Sage, GPL) policy.
> This is untrue. The GPL covers Sage itself, not code written for Sage.
> I'm fairly certain you could sell it with no license problems.
> Obfuscation, though, is another issue, but I think .pyc files would
> work. Of course, this goes against the whole philosophy of Sage.
>
> --
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