Hi :)
Lol, true, i think.  OpenOffice is a fork of Star Office.  Actually i think 
some people would argue that LibreOffice is the continuation of OpenOffice and 
that OpenOffice under Oracle and now Apache is the fork.  TDF is most of the 
original OpenOffice.org community from when that was under Sun and so as a 
community project LibreOffice is arguably the continuation rather than the "new 
kid on the block".  

Either way both projects have at least a decade of experience working under the 
LGPL type copyleft (rather than copyright) agreements.  Creative Commons 
copyleft agreements for documents, artwork, videos and so on presumably built 
from the GPL and LGPL.  
http://creativecommons.org/

Regards from
Tom :)


--- On Thu, 22/12/11, Jay Lozier <jsloz...@gmail.com> wrote:

From: Jay Lozier <jsloz...@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] Question Concerning your product
To: users@global.libreoffice.org
Date: Thursday, 22 December, 2011, 15:56

On 12/21/2011 08:08 PM, Mike Watson wrote:
> 
> 
> 
> I am considering downloading your product to avoid having to buy Microsoft 
> Office.  But I have a question about your product.  On your Features page you 
> said that the LGPL public license could be hacked by the user.  What does 
> that mean?  Does it mean that anyone can hack it?  Please reply whenever you 
> can. Thank you for your time.                         
Libreoffice is open source software issued under the LGPL license which means 
that LO must provide the source code to anyone who wants it. Thus anyone, 
assuming they have the skills, can modify the code for internal/personal use, 
possible inclusion into the LO base code, or release as a derivative project or 
fork. If you release the code, under the terms of the LGPL you must release the 
source code. Note, modified code that LO has not included in the main code base 
must be released as a fork.

LO is actually a fork of Open Office another open source project now under the 
Apache Foundation. Thus the original code for LO is from OOo and it has been 
modified to improve it resulting in LO.

There are numerous official, semi-official, and unofficial sources of LO.

-- Jay Lozier
jsloz...@gmail.com


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