MorphAdorner Licensing confusion
I want to use the MorphAdorner library available free for commercial use. But it uses several other libraries that restrict commercial use (like Gate etc). Can I use this library in my application?
Should I obtain a licence from Oracle before developing Java software? [duplicate]
This question already has answers here: Can we use Java for commercial use? (8 answers) Closed 11 years ago. Should I obtain a licence from Oracle before developing Java software? I’m in the preliminary planning stages of developing a server on top of the the Hadoop/Java platforms. I’m not much at all worried about the […]
GPL and OpenJDK: Questions regarding source headers
I have some legal questions regarding OpenJDKs source header:
License Requirements for Including Dual-Licensed Open-Source Software
How do you opt into one software license and not the other when the distributor gives the consumer more than one choice?
Is this an open source license?
I have been messing with code in The Unix Archive and have found that most of the code references a (non existent) license, however, this is in the root of the mirrors and apparently covers all of the code (typed from a PDF, so excuse the typos): (source pdf is here
Is this an open source license?
I have been messing with code in The Unix Archive and have found that most of the code references a (non existent) license, however, this is in the root of the mirrors and apparently covers all of the code (typed from a PDF, so excuse the typos): (source pdf is here
Is this an open source license?
I have been messing with code in The Unix Archive and have found that most of the code references a (non existent) license, however, this is in the root of the mirrors and apparently covers all of the code (typed from a PDF, so excuse the typos): (source pdf is here
Is this an open source license?
I have been messing with code in The Unix Archive and have found that most of the code references a (non existent) license, however, this is in the root of the mirrors and apparently covers all of the code (typed from a PDF, so excuse the typos): (source pdf is here
Is this an open source license?
I have been messing with code in The Unix Archive and have found that most of the code references a (non existent) license, however, this is in the root of the mirrors and apparently covers all of the code (typed from a PDF, so excuse the typos): (source pdf is here
Signing redistributed files
In order to submit a desktop application for the Windows 8 app store, you need to digitally sign any driver or .exe associated with the application. However, the application I was trying to submit contains several files that are redistributions of other companies’ software, and some of these are not signed. My application was rejected on these grounds. Is it legal (or ethical) to sign other companies’ work so that we can submit our application? I think it might be considered some form of false representation but I’m not sure.