Yeah I'm actually quite lax about remembering to put license on my code. I've 
just thrown up the MIT license on it.

I'll speak to my colleague, but I know I didn't work on it during work time

Aaron Powell
Umbraco Core Team Member | FunnelWeb Team Member

http://www.aaron-powell.com http://twitter.com/slace | Skype: aaron.l.powell 
| MSN: aaz...@hotmail.com


-----Original Message-----
From: Stefan Bodewig [mailto:bode...@apache.org] 
Sent: Friday, 18 February 2011 10:50 PM
To: lucene-net-dev@lucene.apache.org
Subject: Re: Luke.Net

On 2011-02-18, Troy Howard wrote:

> Sergey is already planning to include the Apache License header in the 
> files when he imports them. Other than that, is there any legal 
> process we need to go through to bring this code into the Lucene.Net 
> fold?

Yes, absolutely.

First of all you can't change the license without Aaron's consent - and that of 
all other people who have contributed to Luke.NET so far (I'm assuming it is 
just Aaron's colleague).  I've just performed a cursory look right now and 
can't find any information about Luke.NET's current license.

Second we'd need a software grant by Aaron and his colleague.
Alternatively Aaron and his colleague could sign ICLAs but for complete code 
imports a sofware grant is preferred.  See <http://www.apache.org/licenses/>.  
If the code was created on company time Aaron may need to check with his 
employer and have the employer sign a SGA or CCLA, but he'll know better than 
us.

Finally we'd have to follow the IP-Clearance process 
<http://incubator.apache.org/ip-clearance/index.html> before the code can be 
imported.

Sorry if this sounds a bit like too much legal hassle, but this is the only way 
the ASF can be sure it has all necessary rights to actually distribute the code.

Stefan

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