8 recent turned up (20 or fewer displayed):
- GetMeta:Copyrights
GetWiki and Your
Rights
By default,
you grant permission to copy, distribute
and/or modify your document(s) under the Creative
Commons License Attribution-Share Alike 3.0. ...
- GNU Free Documentation License
GetWiki and the GNU FDL
By
requirement, GetWiki
content which is imported
from supplemental Wikis is
licensed under the GNU FDL,
and additionally by election,
all GetWiki content
(imported or not), is licensed under the Creative
Commons License Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 unless
otherwise noted. ...
- Creative Commons License
GetWiki and the Creative
Commons
By requirement,
GetWiki content
which is imported from
supplemental Wikis is
licensed under the GNU FDL,
and additionally by election,
all GetWiki content
(imported or not), is licensed under the Creative
Commons License Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 unless
otherwise noted. ...
- GNU General Public License
The GNU General Public License is a Copyleft software license. It was written
by a programmer, Richard Stallman in 1989 of the
Free Software
Foundation (FSF), for the distribution of
programs released as part of the GNU
Project. ...
- Creative Commons
The Creative Commons
(CC) is a non-profit organization devoted to
expanding the range of creative work
available for others legally to build upon
and share. ...
- Open Source
Open
sourceOpen
Source Open
Source opensourceOpen-Sourcesoftwareオープンソ
;ースWolne_oprogramowanieÖppen
källkod
%E5%BC%80%E6%94%BE%E6%BA%90%E4%BB%A3%E7%A0%81
Open-source computer software is software
whose source code is either in the public domain or,
more commonly, is copyrighted by one or
more persons/entities but licensed to all
according to an open source license. ...
- GNU FDL
Version 1.2, November 2002
Copyright (C) 2000,2001,2002 ...
- GNU
The GNU project was
launched by Richard Stallman with the goal of
creating a complete free operating system:
the GNU system. The project was
announced to the public on September 27,
1983, on the net.unix-wizards newsgroup. The original
announcement was followed by Stallman's "GNU
Manifesto" and other
essays that laid out his motivations and
ideology for the GNU project, one of which
was to "bring back the cooperative spirit
that prevailed in the computing community in
earlier days", forcibly, if
necessary.
Some content
adapted from the Wikinfo
article "GNU
" under the GNU
Free Documentation License. ...
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