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by aragilar
768 days ago
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I'm pretty sure most instances of relicensing have had a previous claim that wouldn't happen, so I wouldn't assign too much weighting to that (if anything, it should be a red flag to look into what the IP situation is). I think there are a bunch of questions you can ask: * Why is the software open source (if licensing/contractual requirements make it so, that's more likely to keep the status quo vs. corporate claims of "we <heart> open source")? * Who owns the copyright/IP (and what's their reputation)? * What would happen if the the license changes (is there an ecosystem that relies on it being open source, or is it a black box)? * Who cares what the license is (e.g. BerkeleyDB was relicensed, which got old versions frozen in linux distributions, so no-one upgraded to newer versions, and replacements were written)? |
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