19 Jul 19:00
ammendment: free vs. public domain [was vendors and usability]
On Mon, Jul 18, 2005 at 08:50:00AM -0700, Joshua Ferraro wrote: > When I first started working at Nelsonville, I figured that since most > libraries are publicly funded they'd be supporting public domain software. > But instead, the vast majority of folks use proprietary systems. Mike pointed out (thanks) that my use of 'public domain' in this sentence isn't accurate. Public domain is a legal term meaning there is no license at all, whereas Koha is licensed under the open-source General Public License (GPL). There's a good breakdown of the different licensing categories for software here: http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/categories.html Under Public Domain: "Public domain software is software that is not copyrighted. If the source code is in the public domain [...] which means that some copies or modified versions may not be free at all." [... snip ...] " Sometimes people use the term ``public domain'' in a loose fashion to mean ``free'' or ``available gratis.'' However, ``public domain'' is a legal term and means, precisely, ``not copyrighted''. For clarity, we recommend using ``public domain'' for that meaning only, and using other terms to convey the other meanings." Sorry for the confusion, I fell prey to using a nice-sounding word to convey my idea and didn't pay enough attention to the meaning -- and thanks to Mike for pointing out the distinction. Cheers, -- -- Joshua Ferraro VENDOR SERVICES FOR OPEN-SOURCE SOFTWARE President, Technology migration, training, maintenance, support LibLime Featuring Koha Open-Source ILS jmf@... |Full Demos at http://liblime.com/koha |1(888)KohaILS _______________________________________________ Web4lib mailing list Web4lib@... http://lists.webjunction.org/web4lib/
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