Hi! I noticed that many packages in the PyPI are using the PSF License. Does this have a special reason? Is this the common "standard" license for Python libraries?
I'm just asking because I'll release some bigger pieces of Python code to the Open Source Community. In my many projects before I just used GPL or LGPL. This didn't have a special reason. They are just standard OS licenses. I could also have used the BSD License, but I personally like the GPL/LGPL more. Of course I know that there are many, many other licenses out there. I'm not interested in comparing them all for their slight differences. I don't choose the license primarily for protecting my code. I want to choose the license according to the most common/appropriate way of the community. So if it is complicated to include an LGPL'ed Python library in the Python standard libraries, I'd release it under PSF License. I'd like to hear some opinions about that. What licenses do you use, and what's your personal reason for doing so? Also, a quick overview about the various licenses would be nice. Not a legal comparison, but a list about what type of code/programs/libs is usually released under which license. Thanks for your help, Volker -- Volker Grabsch ---<<(())>>--- \frac{\left|\vartheta_0\times\{\ell,\kappa\in\Re\}\right|}{\sqrt [G]{-\Gamma(\alpha)\cdot\mathcal{B}^{\left[\oint\!c_\hbar\right]}}} -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list