Hey all,
I am going to add my 2 cents' worth. I think the editor is less important in 
this case, md markup is pretty simple in and of itself... that's the whole 
point of it, it's the rendering that counts. So really you can use any text 
editor (someone was suggesting emacs in this thread, you can even use vim.) I 
recently came across hugo and although, admittedly, I don't know too much about 
it, it seems pretty cool. It's got an Apache 2 license (see Apache License) and 
FSF has deemed the Apache 2.0 license to be compatible with GPL 3... had to 
look that up on Wikipedia which cites 
https://www.gnu.org/licenses/license-list.html#apache2 
They do list markdown as one of their supported formats, see Supported Content 
Formats  


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Apache License

Hugo v0.15 and later are released under the Apache 2.0 license.
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...and there seems to be a bit of a community around it. Let’s Encrypt use 
it... you may want to check it out.
Greetings , 
 Tatiana

    On Thursday, April 12, 2018, 8:45:26 AM GMT+10, David Maslen 
<l...@maslen.id.au> wrote:  
 
 >>>>> "Glenn" == Glenn McIntosh <neonsig...@meme.net.au> writes:

    Glenn> The content on the site would be considered separate from the
    Glenn> code, and would not be covered by the same copyright. Each
    Glenn> article would be an original work, and you could use a
    Glenn> licence such as CC BY-SA (which is perhaps the most
    Glenn> GPL-like).

For the benefit of others, and tell me if I'm telling you to suck eggs,
copyright exists immediately is certain types of authored material. Both
writing and code are considered literary works.

The author of a work has certain rights concerning how it is used,
displayed reproduced etc.

Licensing is an agreement to waive some of those rights in certain ways,
to let other people use the works.

When copyright ends (life of the author + 70 years) the works enter the
public domain.

Once things have 'fallen' into the public domain other people can reuse
them in pretty much anyway they wish.

Personally I think it would be a good result if the public domain were a
richer library of materials for all of us. This is where the Creative
Commons Zero (CC0) library seems an exciting development.


-- 
Sent with gnus
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