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sfconservancy.org | ||
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katedowninglaw.com
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| | | | | A very common question I get from corporate clients is whether they should use Developer's Certificates of Origin (DCOs) or contributor agreements for their open source projects. I'll refer to both contributor licensing agreements (like Apache's) and contributor copyright assignment agreements (like MongoDB's) as "CLAs" here. In short, the answer is that DCOs work... | |
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www.danlynch.org
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| | | | | Hey everyone, I hope you're good out there. I just wanted to take a quick moment today to tell you about a new show I'm producing for my friends at the Software Freedom Conservancy. For... | |
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fossa.com
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| | | | | Open source licenses determine how a given piece of open source software can be used. Here's what you need to know to navigate the world of OSS licensing. | |
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katedowninglaw.com
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| | | The past year and a half has seen a number of open source and open source-ish companies like Elastic, Confluent, and MongoDB change licenses on certain products, moving away from traditional open source licenses such as Apache 2.0 and towards proprietary, source-available, or ultra copyleft licenses. These companies, lets call them middleware companies, were responding | ||