On Tue, Jun 5, 2012 at 5:29 PM, Tanguy Ortolo wrote:
Is that so? Does that not discriminate against one group, the US
government?
It is just stating that the USA government acquisition regulations
apply to government use/etc of the work. It has about the same effect
as the statement copyright
Bernhard R. Link, 2012-06-04 11:05+0200 (gmane.linux.debian.devel.legal):
Anyway, reading this as plan English language, it says
Use [...] by the Government is subject [...].
It's the Government (with upper case G), so I'd say
it only means the US government.
So it has no meaning to anyone
* Gerber van der Graaf gerber.vdgr...@gmail.com [120603 23:18]:
I am building debian packages of FreeFOAM and come across the following
license statement in
It is no license statement but a copyright statement. To distribute it
you need a license statement. (And to distribute in Debian a free
On Mon, 2012-06-04 at 11:05 +0200, Bernhard R. Link wrote:
* Gerber van der Graaf gerber.vdgr...@gmail.com [120603 23:18]:
I am building debian packages of FreeFOAM and come across the following
license statement in
It is no license statement but a copyright statement. To distribute it
I am building debian packages of FreeFOAM and come across the following
license statement in
./applications/utilities/postProcessing/graphics/ensightFoamReader/global_extern.h:
* Copyright 1998 Computational Engineering International, Inc.
* All Rights Reserved.
*
*Restricted
On Mon, Jun 4, 2012 at 5:22 AM, Gerber van der Graaf wrote:
I am building debian packages of FreeFOAM and come across the following
license statement in
./applications/utilities/postProcessing/graphics/ensightFoamReader/global_extern.h:
* Copyright 1998 Computational Engineering
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