Berkeley Software Distribution licenses: Difference between revisions
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imported>Eric M Gearhart (Initial edit. Need to add more, such as history etc.) |
imported>Eric M Gearhart (Added Categories. Licenses are a Legal thing, so Law Workgroup? Correct?) |
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This license model differs fundamentally from other [[open source]] licenses such as the [[GNU General Public License]], which requires derivative software to have its [[source code]] freely available upon request, and derivative works placed under the same license. | This license model differs fundamentally from other [[open source]] licenses such as the [[GNU General Public License]], which requires derivative software to have its [[source code]] freely available upon request, and derivative works placed under the same license. | ||
[[Category:CZ Live]] | |||
[[Category:Computers Workgroup]] | |||
[[Category:Law Workgroup]] |
Revision as of 10:23, 11 April 2007
The BSD family of licenses are considered "Permissive licenses," meaning users are granted complete control over software that is derived from the original BSD Licensed software.
In this way BSD licenses are considered very close to simply placing software in the Public domain.
This license model differs fundamentally from other open source licenses such as the GNU General Public License, which requires derivative software to have its source code freely available upon request, and derivative works placed under the same license.