> "If your app includes FOSS, it must not cause any > non-FOSS Microsoft > software to become subject to the terms of any FOSS license." > Although Microsoft didn't name it, it's talking about GPL. > > But is it? GPL v2 and v3 are both on the OSI list of "approved" > licenses (whatever that means; OSI is a much younger org than > FSF, and while I appreciate their work and tend toward their > politics more than the FSF's, naming their list "Approved" > complicates things unnecessarily, and IMNSHO smacks of simple > granstanding).
I think the writer is a bit off here, and maybe Microsoft is reiterating something that should be obvious, but for some may not be. My read on this is that "you can use any of these licenses", but regardless, you understand that your license cannot effectively create an unauthorized sublicense of a non FOSS "whatever" as a FOSS "whatever". For example, you cannot use my closed source component in your FOSS project and therefore sublicense and release my closed source component as FOSS. Or am I misreading this? Best regards, Lynn Fredricks Paradigma Software http://www.paradigmasoft.com Valentina Server: The Ultra-fast, Royalty Free Business Reports & Database Server _______________________________________________ use-livecode mailing list use-livecode@lists.runrev.com Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your subscription preferences: http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-livecode