Didier Raboud wrote: > > Hey... it says "open-source" (you can read the code) not "free software" > (you can do whatever you want)...
It appears to be "Open Source" in the sense that it uses OSI-approved licenses, Apache 2.0 for most code, GPL for kernel patches. Note that both of those licenses are also considered to be "free software" licenses by FSF (see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/license-list.html#SoftwareLicenses). Do you have some other definition of "free software" in mind? > http://code.google.com/android/terms.html tells : > <quote from SDK license agreement snipped> > > and others, and others and others... restrictions... Note that those are the terms for the SDK download, not for download or use of the source. > And for the code itself... > > http://source.android.com/license/individual-contributor-license---android-open-source-project > > You have to grant your copyright to Google... That's only if you want to contribute code back to the project. In that case you have to assign your copyright. Many free/open source projects require a similar grant, including Apache and Gnu/FSF (see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/why-assign.html). > I don't want to work non-paid for Google. But please do ! ;) That of course is your choice. But you are free to work on Android without assigning copyright to Google. Just fork a new Didier-Android project--the licenses let you do that. To me, the key issue is whether Google has in fact open-sourced everything needed to make a working Android distribution for a non-supported platform. I'm not qualified to judge, but I'll be waiting to hear from the experts. The good news is that so far, Google appears to be keeping their promise to open-source Android. Jim _______________________________________________ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community