On Monday 24 April 2006 12:59, Avi Miller <avi.miller@squiz.net> wrote: > Brendan Scott wrote: > > This is my experience: > > Yeesh. So how should someone chose a licence? Is there any Open Source > (OSI approved, yadda, yadda) licence that makes legal sense in > Australia? Without spending lots and lots on money paying for Brendan's > time, how does any commercial entity decide which licence makes the most > sense for their business needs? General disclaimer: IANAL This is indeed a problem. Most licences are made with the United States in mind. The MPL, for example, is based on Californian state law. Licences like this might not be as binding in other countries, depending on their legal systems. -- Sridhar Dhanapalan [Yama | http://www.pclinuxonline.com/] {GnuPG/OpenPGP: http://dhanapalan.webhop.net/yama.asc 0x049D38B4 : A7A9 8A02 78CB AB1B FCE4 EEC6 2DD9 249B 049D 38B4} "A fact about UNIX is that it is easy for an administrator to ensure that there are no irrelevant services running. As well as giving the potential for maximizing performance, it is useful to be sure that there are no random TCP/IP or UDP ports open that could be used as a basis for an attack." - Microsoft, 'Converting a UNIX .COM Site to Windows', 2000-22-08
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