You don't have to include a notice of copyright to enjoy copyright protection (under the Berne Convention). Nothing is assumed to be public domain unless it is explicitly disclaimed as such.
Since licence terms are based on copyright I don't think you need to state it everywhere. If someone fails to receive a copy of the licence they can assume no rights to copy your code. On 9 Sep 2013 14:18, "Jonathan Hartley" <tart...@tartley.com> wrote: > A small Python project of mine is apparently being included in Chromium, > because I've had a bug report from them that my source files (plural) fail > their build-time license checker. > > They'd like me to include a license and copyright info in every source > file (including empty __init__.py files). > > I've responded that I don't want to be unhelpful, but I don't believe in > putting duplicate license and copyright info in every source code file. To > my mind, it belongs in a single central place, i.e. the project LICENSE > file. > > Am I being unreasonable and/or daft? > > Jonathan > > -- > Jonathan Hartley tart...@tartley.com http://tartley.com > Made of meat. +44 7737 062 225 twitter/skype: tartley > > ______________________________**_________________ > python-uk mailing list > python-uk@python.org > https://mail.python.org/**mailman/listinfo/python-uk<https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-uk> >
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