Dirk, Thanks for the answer as well.
Dor -----Original Message----- From: Dirk-Willem van Gulik [mailto:di...@webweaving.org] Sent: יום ב 22 פברואר 2016 20:25 To: general@incubator.apache.org Subject: [MARKETING] Re: License question On 21 Feb 2016, at 14:25, Dor Ben Dov <dor.ben-...@amdocs.com> wrote: > Let's say I (company) go the ASF way. > > To incubator and later on into TLP. > > Does it mean that the license would be in the end only Apache License 2 ? or > can it still remain for example, lgpl ? Any and all code the ASF releases/distributes is under the Apache license. Likewise; any further contributions to that code that Apache receives and, which under the auspices of the PMC, are incorporated into the codebase, are released under the ASF license. It is (initially) possible for the (original) author of the code to also distribute the (originally donated) code under an different license. So then there are two strands. One maintained at the ASF and one maintained by the original author. Over time the two versions are likely to start to differ. And the fixes/improvements made to the ASF strand are only available under the ASF license. It is possible for that author to incorporate these apache changes to his version of the code base. These will then be under the apache license. So at that point the original author his derived work will be under the apache license for the apache part of the code; and under some other license of his or her choosing for the rest. It is also possible for a totally different third party to combine the apache code base with his or her ‘own’ fixes or special changes - and release that as a derived work; keeping their ‘own’ fixes under a different, potentially more restricted, license. This is fairly common - for example the IBM WebSphere and Oracle product suites contain apache code (under an ASF license) augmented by a lot of proprietary code from these companies, > By means, when It is Apache License 2, can one company take this open source > and offer support for it for money ? or adopt it and sell it ? The Apache license allows for a wide range of business models. A company can offer support on it; can make a commercial version; can add its own (commercial) modules, make a special binary only version for an arcane platform, etc, etc. It can make that special version open source or it can hoard it. However the (original) apache source code continues to be available under the Apache License - as is any further contribution given to the ASF. Or in other words - you can pretty much do with it what you want - but the apache version is always available under an apache license. Dw. --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: general-unsubscr...@incubator.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: general-h...@incubator.apache.org This message and the information contained herein is proprietary and confidential and subject to the Amdocs policy statement, you may review at http://www.amdocs.com/email_disclaimer.asp