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[-] Anders429@lemmy.world 5 points 11 months ago

The community tends to favor more permissive licenses in general. I think a lot of it is due to a large amount of core libraries (often owned by members of the core team, in Rust nursery, or otherwise central to the ecosystem) using MIT or Apache 2.0, which means users who begin publishing their own libraries and know next to nothing about licenses will just follow suit.

I do wonder how it would hold up on court to basically clone something by rewriting it in a different programming language and then relicense it. I'm no lawyer though, I have little understanding of how these things work.

[-] nous@programming.dev 10 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

I do wonder how it would hold up on court to basically clone something by rewriting it in a different programming language and then relicense it.

I believe that the US court has already rules that programming APIs are not copyrightable - only the implementation is. So a rewrite of something does not infringe on the original. Though proving you have not copied source from the original is harder - a clean room rewrite is generally preferred for such things (where the authors have not seen the original implementation ever before). I believe the google vs oracle lawsuits over java/openjdk was where the precedence was set. Though I am not a lawyer and could have gotten this wrong.

[-] CrabLangEnjoyer@lemmy.world 4 points 11 months ago

If cloning something by rewriting it would be an issue the GNU utils would have the same problem since they're also just clones of proprietary Unix commands that the GNU project doesn't own

[-] arthur@lemmy.zip 4 points 11 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

But they (GNU) used the original Unix code to rewrite it or they did a clean implementation just cloning the behavior?

Edit: Cloning*

this post was submitted on 01 Jan 0001
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