-
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 139
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
Relicense under dual MIT/Apache-2.0 #55
Comments
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 license, allowing licensees to chose either at their option |
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 license, allowing licensees to chose either at their option. (Full stop! The sentence needs a full stop at the end of it!) |
I give permission to Ning Sun (sunng87) to license my contributions to On Fri, Jan 08, 2016 at 04:28:11PM -0800, Chris Morgan wrote:
|
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 license, allowing licensees to chose either at their option. |
3 similar comments
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 license, allowing licensees to chose either at their option. |
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 license, allowing licensees to chose either at their option. |
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 license, allowing licensees to chose either at their option. |
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 On Sat, Jan 9, 2016 at 8:33 AM Andrew Gallant [email protected]
|
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 license, allowing licensees to chose either at their option. |
1 similar comment
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 license, allowing licensees to chose either at their option. |
What is the current state of this? Expect @hugoduncan, @Eric-Guo and @AlexTalker every agreed. So I wonder if:
Through the decision probably should be made after getting the (Also note that 2. probably should be done through a rebase Just to be on the clear side, all contributions are |
MIT license allows sublicensing, which means you can use this work under a different license, just retain the copyright. So permission from all contributor isn't strictly required (as I think it's implied that they were licensing their work under MIT too). Am I misunderstanding the license? |
Yes, that's not what sublicensing means.
…On Fri, Jul 13, 2018, at 16:43, Paul Colomiets wrote:
MIT license allows sublicensing, which means you can use this work under
a different license, just retain the copyright. So permission from all
contributor isn't strictly required (as I think it's implied that they
were licensing their work under MIT too). Am I misunderstanding the
license?
--
You are receiving this because you were mentioned.
Reply to this email directly or view it on GitHub:
#55 (comment)
--
cmr
http://octayn.net/
+16038524272
|
I just noticed this. You have my permission to re-license my contributions under any license you choose.
Hugo Duncan
… On 13 Jul 2018, at 20:11, Corey Richardson ***@***.***> wrote:
Yes, that's not what sublicensing means.
On Fri, Jul 13, 2018, at 16:43, Paul Colomiets wrote:
> MIT license allows sublicensing, which means you can use this work under
> a different license, just retain the copyright. So permission from all
> contributor isn't strictly required (as I think it's implied that they
> were licensing their work under MIT too). Am I misunderstanding the
> license?
>
> --
> You are receiving this because you were mentioned.
> Reply to this email directly or view it on GitHub:
> #55 (comment)
--
cmr
http://octayn.net/
+16038524272
—
You are receiving this because you were mentioned.
Reply to this email directly, view it on GitHub, or mute the thread.
|
Added new contributors to the table.
|
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 license, allowing licensees to chose either at their option. |
14 similar comments
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 license, allowing licensees to chose either at their option. |
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 license, allowing licensees to chose either at their option. |
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 license, allowing licensees to chose either at their option. |
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 license, allowing licensees to chose either at their option. |
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 license, allowing licensees to chose either at their option. |
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 license, allowing licensees to chose either at their option. |
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 license, allowing licensees to chose either at their option. |
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 license, allowing licensees to chose either at their option. |
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 license, allowing licensees to chose either at their option. |
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 license, allowing licensees to chose either at their option. |
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 license, allowing licensees to chose either at their option. |
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 license, allowing licensees to chose either at their option. |
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 license, allowing licensees to chose either at their option. |
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 license, allowing licensees to chose either at their option. |
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 license, allowing licensees to chose either at their option. |
1 similar comment
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 license, allowing licensees to chose either at their option. |
Feel like I've missed the party but anyway: |
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 license, allowing licensees to chose either at their option. |
3 similar comments
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 license, allowing licensees to chose either at their option. |
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 license, allowing licensees to chose either at their option. |
I license past and future contributions under the dual MIT/Apache-2.0 license, allowing licensees to chose either at their option. |
This issue was automatically generated. Feel free to close without ceremony if
you do not agree with re-licensing or if it is not possible for other reasons.
Respond to @cmr with any questions or concerns, or pop over to
#rust-offtopic
on IRC to discuss.You're receiving this because someone (perhaps the project maintainer)
published a crates.io package with the license as "MIT" xor "Apache-2.0" and
the repository field pointing here.
TL;DR the Rust ecosystem is largely Apache-2.0. Being available under that
license is good for interoperation. The MIT license as an add-on can be nice
for GPLv2 projects to use your code.
Why?
The MIT license requires reproducing countless copies of the same copyright
header with different names in the copyright field, for every MIT library in
use. The Apache license does not have this drawback. However, this is not the
primary motivation for me creating these issues. The Apache license also has
protections from patent trolls and an explicit contribution licensing clause.
However, the Apache license is incompatible with GPLv2. This is why Rust is
dual-licensed as MIT/Apache (the "primary" license being Apache, MIT only for
GPLv2 compat), and doing so would be wise for this project. This also makes
this crate suitable for inclusion and unrestricted sharing in the Rust
standard distribution and other projects using dual MIT/Apache, such as my
personal ulterior motive, the Robigalia project.
Some ask, "Does this really apply to binary redistributions? Does MIT really
require reproducing the whole thing?" I'm not a lawyer, and I can't give legal
advice, but some Google Android apps include open source attributions using
this interpretation. Others also agree with
it.
But, again, the copyright notice redistribution is not the primary motivation
for the dual-licensing. It's stronger protections to licensees and better
interoperation with the wider Rust ecosystem.
How?
To do this, get explicit approval from each contributor of copyrightable work
(as not all contributions qualify for copyright) and then add the following to
your README:
and in your license headers, use the following boilerplate (based on that used in Rust):
Be sure to add the relevant
LICENSE-{MIT,APACHE}
files. You can copy thesefrom the Rust repo for a plain-text
version.
And don't forget to update the
license
metadata in yourCargo.toml
to:I'll be going through projects which agree to be relicensed and have approval
by the necessary contributors and doing this changes, so feel free to leave
the heavy lifting to me!
Contributor checkoff
To agree to relicensing, comment with :
Or, if you're a contributor, you can check the box in this repo next to your
name. My scripts will pick this exact phrase up and check your checkbox, but
I'll come through and manually review this issue later as well.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: