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by BeetleB
1842 days ago
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Thanks for educating me - I did not know about this. Not sure I see it as a problem, though. I'm producing static files, and uploading them to a web server. At no point is a user communicating with the program - which I think is the key clause that triggers the AGPL. The whole discussion about templates being treated as code is enlightening - but again: No user is communicating with the templates either. Furthermore, even if I'm wrong on this, I don't see the leap that the content of the blog has to be AGPL. At worst, I'd merely have to release my templates and any other modifications I've made to the code (custom plugins, etc). |
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The practical problem is that some organizations simply discourage or don't allow the use of GPLv3 or AGPL software. I don't want to learn one tool for personal projects and another for potential work projects, in case the opportunity comes up.
The easiest way to deal with that is to just switch to a tool that has a license that is more widely accepted.