Licensing: Difference between revisions
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OLPC is a strong advocate for and practitioner of open licensing, as the project is designed around the idea of the free sharing of knowledge. Our goal is to empower children to share and build on what they learn in every way imaginable. There should be no barriers to children who wish to recreate and build on the materials, software, and tools they are given; everyone should be free to use, redistribute, and produce modified version of and works derived from these things. For more on OLPC's specific views on this, see the [[OLPC on open source software]] and [[Content#On free knowledge|OLPC on free knowledge]] sections. |
OLPC is a strong advocate for and practitioner of open licensing, as the project is designed around the idea of the free sharing of knowledge. Our goal is to empower children to share and build on what they learn in every way imaginable. There should be no barriers to children who wish to recreate and build on the materials, software, and tools they are given; everyone should be free to use, redistribute, and produce modified version of and works derived from these things. For more on OLPC's specific views on this, see the [[OLPC on open source software]] and [[Content#On free knowledge|OLPC on free knowledge]] sections. |
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== See also == |
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*[[Contributing content]] |
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*[[Content#On free knowledge]] |
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[[Category:Licensing]] |
[[Category:Licensing]] |
Revision as of 16:52, 6 September 2007
NOTE: The contents of this page are not set in stone, and are subject to change! This page is a draft in active flux ... |
This page covers licensing and copyright issues as they pertain to the One Laptop Per Child project.
For those already familiar with open licenses, our advice is:
- Are you writing code for an end-user application? Use the GPL.
- Are you writing a code library? Use the LGPL or MIT license.
- Are you creating something else? Release your work into the public domain with the CC-PD declaration. If you can't do that, use CC-BY.
For a succinct introduction to open licensing, see the Open Knowledge Foundation's Guide to open licensing.
For a list of open licenses and information on how to apply them, see their licenses page.
OLPC is a strong advocate for and practitioner of open licensing, as the project is designed around the idea of the free sharing of knowledge. Our goal is to empower children to share and build on what they learn in every way imaginable. There should be no barriers to children who wish to recreate and build on the materials, software, and tools they are given; everyone should be free to use, redistribute, and produce modified version of and works derived from these things. For more on OLPC's specific views on this, see the OLPC on open source software and OLPC on free knowledge sections.