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by quotemstr
552 days ago
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I read the text: it's license hermenuetics at best and FUD at worst. Has there been a single instance in recorded history of the author of a public domain work trying to enforce usage, modification, or distribution permissions. Sure, you can point to theoretical variation in the precise semantics of the public domain in various jurisdictions, but it feels like a bar exam puzzle, not a real world practical concern. In the real world, you can safely do whatever you want with public domain software. It counts as free software. That half the planet nowadays uses SQLite and treats it as free software is testament to this reality. Obscure license pedanticism just doesn't inform the choices of anyone actually building. |
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In other words you don't use PD software "like Free Software". You can use it in many places where Free Software would not be permissible.
In terms of -developer- freedom, public domain is top of the pile, the Open Source, then Free Software.
In terms of -user- freedoms Free Software is top of the pile, OSS in the middle, public domain is similar to commercial software.