26 May 22:31
Re: The original Squeak release is available under APSL2.
stéphane ducasse <ducasse <at> iam.unibe.ch>
2006-05-26 20:31:17 GMT
2006-05-26 20:31:17 GMT
I think that we should take the opportunity to put in place a way to track squeak developers/contributors so that we avoid license mess. I think that we (the squeakfoundation) will be looking for a volunteer (may be payed) to develop a small app so that contributors can sign in that the code going into the image is under APSL2 or MIT or Squeak-L. Stef On 24 mai 06, at 19:38, Craig Latta wrote: > > Hi all-- > > Thanks to long-running efforts by folks at Viewpoints Research > Institute, Apple Computer and elsewhere, Apple has given Viewpoints > permission to make a release of the original public Squeak system > using the Apple Public Source License[1]. > > Squeak 1.1, with an APSL2 license, is available here: > > http://squeakland.org/installers/Squeak1.1-APSL.zip > > The Squeak Foundation board would like to thank the above groups > for making this happen, and everyone else for being so patient! > > And now we live in interesting times. This only applies to the > original release of Squeak (version 1.1 of 23 September 1996); we > now have a choice between APSL2 and the original Squeak License[2] > for that release. We need to decide what to do about subsequent > code, and code written by third parties. We might choose to rewrite > some things so as to create a better licensing situation. We > probably want to have a policy whereby contributors agree to grant > a particular license to their work explicitly before we can accept it. > > How shall we proceed with future releases of Squeak? Let's discuss > it. > > > thanks again, > your Squeak Foundation board > > [1] http://www.opensource.apple.com/apsl/2.0.txt > [2] http://www.squeak.org/SqueakLicense > > -- > Craig Latta > improvisational musical informaticist > www.netjam.org > Smalltalkers do: [:it | All with: Class, (And love: it)] > > >
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