Free Software License

Generally speaking, free software license is a phrase used by the free software movement to mean any software license that meets the free software definition of the Free Software Foundation (FSF). This definition refers to the four kinds of freedom for users of software:
  1. The freedom to run the program for any purpose
  2. The freedom to study and modify the program
  3. The freedom to copy the program
  4. The freedom to redistribute modified versions of the program
(Their numbering is zero-based in traditional hacker style.) A license that additionally requires that those freedoms be preserved for modified works is a copyleft license. See Free software movement for more information. The Free Software Foundation maintains a list of free software licenses at their web site. The list distinguishes between free software licenses that are compatible or incompatible with the FSF license of choice, the GNU General Public License, which is a copyleft license. The list also contains licenses which the FSF considers non-free for various reasons. Note that the open source license list differs slightly, but in almost all cases the definitions apply to the same licenses. The Debian Free Software Guidelines are also frequently used to determine whether a license is a free software license.

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
film crew
fear
florida
football team
f
food preservation
frequency modulation
faith and rationality
list of film institutes
forth
f wave
fruit
french materialism
february
february 1
first lady of the united states
list of french proverbs
frank herbert
fictional language
formula one
franco baresi
faunal stage
franz kafka
fields medal
the trial
the metamorphosis
francisco goya
frequency probability
list of french language poets
fm 2030
foetus
fetus
west flemish
fritz leiber
flanders
freud (disambiguation)
first past the post electoral system
february 14
french fries
field hockey
finagle's law
fundamental interaction
floppy disk
fencing