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The Community Cafe The Community Chat area is for lighthearted and enjoyable discussions, like you might find around a water cooler at work. Almost any non-tech-support topic may be discussed here. Discussions on religion and politics are not allowed, except for politics directly related to free and open source issues. Any topic or discussion that causes problems or drama will be closed. This area is intended for fun and community building, not arguments. Please take those elsewhere. Thanks! |
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Just Give Me the Beans!
![]() Join Date: Jan 2009
Beans: 82
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Well, it seems after around a week that InaTux's "Author's Choice of Terminology License (ACT / ACTL)" isn't going to happen.
I've been in talks with the "Heads of Development" at InaTux.com, the people in charge of ACT software license. Me and like seven more people helped write a software license to be used in addition to other software licenses, like the GNU GPL. The ACT license was going to be a software license to "amend" the GPL's principles so to speak, in that it restricted derivative software works to retain the same naming terminology that the original author chose for it. And for a weeks work the license made good progress, but after a talk with Richard Stallman, InaTux said development is to be discontinued. So I thought I might share the license in it's latest and final state. ************************************************** ************************ Author's Choice of Terminology License (ACT / ACTL) ACTL is a software*license that*ensures all works, when distributed or redistributed, either derivative or otherwise, must retain the same naming terminology that the original author chose for his/hers*work, as well as attribute the same license to the works be they derivative or not. For example, the Debian distribution prefers the term GNU/Linux opposed to the term "Linux" when describing their operating system, and other distributions. Free Software apposed to Open Source Software as well. Debian licensed under such a license, in addition to a GPL license v1, v2, or v3, would have ensured Ubuntu be referred to as "Ubuntu GNU/Linux" by Canonical Ltd. This license is intended to be used as a "sub-license" or additional license to licenses like the GPL, MIT License, GFDL, zlib License, LGPL, etc. Start Of Author's Choice Of Terminology License (ACT*or ACTL) Section 1: All software, programs, scripts, text -- including*manuals -- etc,*when distributed or redistributed, derivative or not, under this, the Author's Choice of Terminology License (ACT*or ACTL)*must retain the original author's choice in terminology, including for example the term GNU+Linux opposed to the term Linux,*or Free Software opposed to Open Source Software, or vise* versa, and must refrain from using any other term than that chosen by the original author, by attribution in the software. Derivative works being "work based on the software" either a work containing the software or portions of it, verbatim or with modifications and/or translated into another language. (Hereinafter, translation is included without limitation in the term "derivative".) Each licensee is addressed as "you". When you modify your copy or copies of the software or any portion of it, you thus form a work based on the software. All software, programs, scripts, text -- including*manuals -- etc,*when distributed or redistributed, derivative or not, under this, the ACTL, you must conspicuously and appropriately publish on each copy an appropriate copyright notice of the ACTL; keep intact all the notices that refer to this License; and give any other recipients of the software a copy of this License along with the software. All specified terminology to be used in either the software, programs, scripts, text -- including*manuals --*etc, or in the process of marketing such works, in television advertisements, on web sites, in documentation, CDs, DVDs, and all other forms of hard and/or soft copies of such works for distribution, must be retained and attributed to the works, whether the software is derivative or not. End of Section 1 Section 2: This license is not retroactive, though, if or when software on which distributed, redistributed, and/or derivative software is based, attributes or in any other way uses this, the Author's Choice of Terminology License (ACT*or ACTL) all distributed, redistributed, and/or derivative software works later based on such software must follow Section 1 of this license. End of Section 2 <ACTL website> may publish revised and/or new versions of the Author's Choice of Terminology License from time to time. Such new versions will be similar in spirit to the present version, but may differ in detail to address new problems or concerns. Each version is given a distinguishing version number. If the software specifies a version number of this License which applies to it and "any later version", you have the option of following the terms and conditions either of that version or of any later version published by <ACTL website>. If the software does not specify a version number of this License, you may choose any version ever published by the <ACTL website>. End of ACT License Applying this license to your works: <one line to give the program's name and a brief idea of what it does.> Copyright (C) <year> <name of author> This <program/text/script/etc> is to be referred to as <free/open source> software, not <open-source/free> software, or any other term that is not the term <free/open source>. This <program/text/script/etc> is to be referred to as for the operating system <GNU+Linux/Linux/Windows/Mac OS X> and no other term that is not the term <GNU+Linux/Linux/Windows/Mac OS X>. You should have received a copy of the Author's Choice of Terminology License along with this software. If not, see <http://www.<ACTL website>/>. ************************************************** ************************ Good Day. |
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