David,
Thank you for the clarification on the Apache 2.0 License change. I did not realize the situation that OFBiz was in with respect to copyright law and intellectual property, and certainly did not know that someone other than yourself or Andy could claim ownership of the project,,EEEKS! I am beginning to see the method of your madness here (not that you need any one's approval), I was just trying to figure out why, and if so, how does this effect all of the contributors as well as all of the people who have sold derivatives based on the MIT licensed version of OFBiz. I am currently looking into the ASF (I am not much on law though) to see how this would effect myself in particular, as I have been planning a very large deployment based on OFBiz for some time now and see the greatest potential with OFBiz as compared to the other frameworks that are out there. BTW: did I realy sound like that much of a hick when I said "If it aint broke dont fix it"? :) Respectfully Questionable, Dale Key _______________________________________________ Users mailing list [hidden email] http://lists.ofbiz.org/mailman/listinfo/users |
Dale, This won't have any effect on previous versions that are MIT licensed. It is only future revisions/versions after the license change that would be affected. If you look over the Apache 2.0 license you'll see that for derivative works and such it is pretty much just as liberal as the MIT license, and in fact is a derivative of the MIT/BSD camp (as opposed to the GPL/Mozilla/etc camp). No, you didn't sound like a hick saying that. I come from somewhat of a redneck family background and some of them still have pretty strong accents and such, so I was just having a little fun with it. Even aside from family background living in Utah (and I've just moved last weekend to a small town in Utah, purchased an old hotel to use as apartment and office units), this is the land of words like "heck" instead of hell and "fur" instead of for, and the list goes on... -David On Dec 9, 2005, at 6:41 PM, [hidden email] wrote: > David, > > Thank you for the clarification on the Apache 2.0 License change. I > did > not realize the situation that OFBiz was in with respect to > copyright law > and intellectual property, and certainly did not know that someone > other > than yourself or Andy could claim ownership of the project,,EEEKS! > I am > beginning to see the method of your madness here (not that you need > any > one's approval), I was just trying to figure out why, and if so, > how does > this effect all of the contributors as well as all of the people > who have > sold derivatives based on the MIT licensed version of OFBiz. > > I am currently looking into the ASF (I am not much on law though) > to see > how this would effect myself in particular, as I have been planning > a very > large deployment based on OFBiz for some time now and see the greatest > potential with OFBiz as compared to the other frameworks that are out > there. > > BTW: did I realy sound like that much of a hick when I said "If it > aint > broke don’t fix it"? :) > > Respectfully Questionable, > > Dale Key > > > _______________________________________________ > Users mailing list > [hidden email] > http://lists.ofbiz.org/mailman/listinfo/users _______________________________________________ Users mailing list [hidden email] http://lists.ofbiz.org/mailman/listinfo/users |
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