I see what you mean about public domain here for example:
http://www.mingw.org/license
*MinGW Runtime:* All releases of the MinGW base runtime package, prior to
release 4.0, have been placed in the public domain, and are not governed by
copyright. This basically means that you can do what you like
2013/5/18 atkaaz
> Could you elaborate on this:
>
>> It is extremely unlikely that folks in large companies will be able to
>> use code released
>> under such an exotic license.
>>
>
Their legal department won't let them because they are not familiar with
Unlicense and have no interest or time to
On Sat, May 18, 2013 at 4:48 PM, Michael Klishin <
michael.s.klis...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 2013/5/18 atkaaz
>
>> Hi. Can I release my clojure code under unlicensed?
>> http://unlicense.org/
>>
>
> You can but it's not a very good idea. Not all countries have the notion
> of public domain.
>
Could
2013/5/18 atkaaz
> Hi. Can I release my clojure code under unlicensed?
> http://unlicense.org/
>
You can but it's not a very good idea. Not all countries have the notion of
public domain.
It is extremely unlikely that folks in large companies will be able to use
code released
under such an exoti
Hi. Can I release my clojure code under unlicensed?
http://unlicense.org/
Maybe the code and the jar can be, right? But how about the uberjar which
includes clojure itself which is under EPL?(for example I cannot dist the
uberjar under GPL) Is my code being unlicensed like that work ok with
clojur