I don’t think that works as a wizard, and the analysis of licenses on that site 
is pretty high level (i.e., I’m not sure it would tell you, say, the 
differences between the multiple “weak copyleft” licenses on the OSI list so 
that one could decide which one might be best for one’s particular project – 
which is what I think Larry was suggesting might be helpful).

From: License-discuss [mailto:license-discuss-boun...@opensource.org] On Behalf 
Of Christopher Sean Morrison
Sent: Friday, April 07, 2017 11:32 AM
To: license-discuss@opensource.org
Subject: Re: [License-discuss] notes on a systematic approach to "popular" 
licenses


On Apr 7, 2017, at 2:14 PM, Smith, McCoy 
<mccoy.sm...@intel.com<mailto:mccoy.sm...@intel.com>> wrote:

But I think that at some point it would be helpful for there to be a resource 
for people to sift through all the licenses on the list to understand what they 
do and don’t do.

Isn’t that exactly what https://tldrlegal.com does?  They even have the 
OSI-approved ones marked and sorted by popularity (as determined by eyeballs on 
their site):  https://tldrlegal.com/licenses/tags/OSI-Approved

Cheers!
Sean

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