On Jun 23, 2014, at 5:25 PM, Walter Bright via dmd-internals 
<[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> What practical right does one retain when it is licensed under Boost?
> 
> Ya know, I don't want to retain rights to D. I originally tried to make it 
> public domain, until several people informed me that PD was not a legal 
> concept in many countries. Boost was the next best thing. I want to continue 
> to make D as available as possible, and that means the license may need to be 
> adjusted in the future. If contributors do not share those goals, then yes, 
> they should reconsider contributing to D.
> 
> I do understand the issue of retaining credit for one's work. But I believe 
> that the github commit history amply supports that goal, and is one of the 
> reasons I am very much in favor of using github for D.

I’m past the point of caring about copyrights for my own work.  Even about 
requiring attribution.  If someone really wants to claim my work is their own, 
whatever.  All I really care about is that the code exists and hopefully 
someone benefits from it.  My perspective was a bit different when I was 
younger and more interested in being recognized for my efforts though.

Regarding licenses in general, I think the issue with releasing code into the 
public domain is that in some countries it’s not possible for the creator of 
something to completely absolve themselves of ownership of that thing.  I 
suspect that assigning the copyright to someone else should be acceptable under 
that framework, but it would be worth looking into.  Maybe the GCC folks would 
know, since they do require assigning copyright to them when code is 
contributed, correct?

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