Thank you, Mojca for this interesting and clear explanation. I tend to
roll my eyes and eat chocolate when people start talking about licenses,
but you make it seem clear and sensible.
Thanks!
Dominik
On Sat, 3 Nov 2018 at 13:12, Mojca Miklavec
wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I just want to thank Dominik
Hi,
I just want to thank Dominik Wujastyk and Graham Toal for giving us
the permission to use the MIT licence for the British patterns.
We will take care of the required modifications, release a new version
of hyph-utf8 and also ask for update in ConTeXt which triggered the
initial bug report.
On 11/3/2018 2:21 AM, Steve Peter wrote:
They can still be accessed with the \brexit command...
Which will isolate your computer and tex distribution from the rest of
the world forever.
Hans
-
Dominik Wujastyk wrote:
They can still be accessed with the \brexit command...
Steve
> On Nov 2, 2018, at 21:12, Dominik Wujastyk wrote:
>
> The UK hyphenations patterns must stay within TeXlive, that's a given. So
> let's change the license on the pattern files. As co-creator of the file, I
> hereby agree with
The UK hyphenations patterns must stay within TeXlive, that's a given. So
let's change the license on the pattern files. As co-creator of the file,
I hereby agree with the MIT license. I don't know if Graham Toal, the
person who worked with me on producing these patterns, can be reached.
I'll
Dear Dominik,
According to Debian we will probably have to delete the British
hyphenation patterns from TeX Live unless the licence changes. See:
https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=912557
In general it is becoming increasingly problematic to use custom
(free-text) licences for