eddyp wrote:me does the "this software is liberated software" dance

Moderators: winston, another_commander
It means it's now also free for commercial purposes. This means that it can be installed as a pastime in an internet café, for example. It also means you can box it and sell it in a shop (and keep all the profits) as long as you make the source available and let your customers know that the product they're buying is free.reills wrote:What does this all mean to us simple folk?
I'd rephrase that to, "You can attempt to make money by selling the program, even though it is available for free." Put it on a CD and sell it if you want. To directly quote the GPL:davcefai wrote:You can't make money by selling the program - it is available for free.
So, slap Oolite onto CDs and sell it at your local car boot sale at £3 each. Make a killing. If the police show up after a "piracy" tip-off, show them the license. Sell some Linux stuff (and OpenOffice.org) while you're at it. It's a free world, when you have free software. (-:GNU wrote:You may charge a fee for the physical act of transferring a copy, and
you may at your option offer warranty protection in exchange for a fee.
Well, you don't have to make the fact that it's free obvious. A readme file on the CD should do the trick. They'll just assume that they're getting a pirated game for less than the market price.DerekHartley wrote:I'd be surprised if people thought £3 was an acceptable price for sticking something free on a CD.So, slap Oolite onto CDs and sell it at your local car boot sale at £3 each
Read it again. It’s CC-by-nc-sa-2 for Oolite 1.65, and CC-by-nc-sa-3 for subsequent releases.Diziet Sma wrote:I've just noticed some conflicting information in the licensing announcement OP.
After stating in the opening paragraph that resources are licensed under the CC-by-nc-sa-3, all further mentions of this license refer to the CC-by-nc-sa-2. This ought to be updated..