You can license your plugin in any way you want. You don't have to use the
same licenses as jQuery itself.
For jQuery, just ignore the GPL license and use the MIT license instead.
Read the license - it really doesn't restrict you at all. It essentially
just says Keep the copyright and license
Much thanks. My concerns over licensing have always been pretty moot.
I usually just throw a GPL on there and call it a day. This
commercially supported open source is new to me. :)
On Dec 16, 12:34 pm, Michael Geary m...@mg.to wrote:
You can license your plugin in any way you want. You don't
On Dec 16, 2008, at 6:44 PM, Eric Hobo Garside wrote:
I've got a quick question for all the licensing gurus who happen to be
on or about the list. I'm developing a plugin for jQuery for a
company, and want to release it as open source with a non-competition
stipulation. Is it possible to
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