andkonDOTcom wrote:
http://www.andkon.com/stuf/mozilla3/It means if Netscape, for example, included the JavaScript engine in a server product, they would not have to open source any part of that server product.
Okay read specifically the section "Netscape Fraud" where I ramble
about the Netscape license. I understand the Netscape License to mean
that they do not have to release some part of modified code as open
source.
However, the NPL exceptions have no real impact on Mozilla development today, because there is so much MPLed code in the tree that Netscape would probably have great difficulty extracting a large enough NPLed piece to be useful in something else.
Gerv
