Website Licenses...?
- Brynet-Inc
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As for the BSD licensed work, or even public domain, if somebody comes up with such a derivate work, and free, it effectively complies with the license even if it's not specifically planned.Brynet-Inc wrote:Sadly some people fail to realize you have to keep the "original licence text" in any derivatives.
But if something is licensed and does exist as a free work and somebody comes up trying to privatize it, wouldn't the free, original work prevail over the equivalent closed one, anyway?
But, yes, it looks like licensing everything properly has become a necessary routine.
Until something goes wrong and some dipshit takes you to court... that is the point of licenses, people **** on you so protect yourself, it is far from paranoid it is common sense.bubach wrote:Licence on a website? Nobody is gonna give a crap anyway..
And thats my polite way of saying that you are paranoid.
However, there are many countries around the world in which people seem to have Gigabytes and Gigabytes of all sorts of illegal stuff, and they don't seem to be sued, and all they say is "it's your responsibility to download it, we only have it for reference and backup"... so, I don't get to understand how they have many many years running their highly illegal-content websites without apparent problem.
What about that? They even seem to earn something because of that...
What about that? They even seem to earn something because of that...
I think you miss the point. If people store illegal content, they will be shut down eventually. A license has nothing todo with being able to break the law.~ wrote:However, there are many countries around the world in which people seem to have Gigabytes and Gigabytes of all sorts of illegal stuff, and they don't seem to be sued, and all they say is "it's your responsibility to download it, we only have it for reference and backup"... so, I don't get to understand how they have many many years running their highly illegal-content websites without apparent problem.
What about that? They even seem to earn something because of that...
No, hosting illegal content requires enough money to buy the best fact-obfuscating lawyers around when you do end up in the courtroomTyler wrote:I think you miss the point. If people store illegal content, they will be shut down eventually. A license has nothing todo with being able to break the law.~ wrote:However, there are many countries around the world in which people seem to have Gigabytes and Gigabytes of all sorts of illegal stuff, and they don't seem to be sued, and all they say is "it's your responsibility to download it, we only have it for reference and backup"... so, I don't get to understand how they have many many years running their highly illegal-content websites without apparent problem.
What about that? They even seem to earn something because of that...
Has Bas Vogel, the creator of your site's design, given permission for the redistribution of his html and css under your modified BSD license? I doubt it.Alboin wrote:Okay, I decided just to put a modified BSD license up to cover everything on my site.
You can see that for something like a website, adding a license is generally more trouble then it is worth.
I am both disturbed and in eager anticipation at the thought of what content you will have needing such a disclaimer.
P.S. Yes, this means you need to remove the license.