(no title)
ucirello | 4 days ago
In a sense, a futile effort; because if you reverse engineer a nlspec and rebuild it, then you can have it with any license you may want.
ucirello | 4 days ago
In a sense, a futile effort; because if you reverse engineer a nlspec and rebuild it, then you can have it with any license you may want.
embedding-shape|4 days ago
I was more curious why go with modifying a FOSS license (which clearly isn't the right choice if you want to prevent others from doing whatever with it) instead of just straight up keeping full copyright to yourself/the company and a "regular" license?
Then you get exactly what you want, without also sending double-messages about that people can do whatever they want, which is what you're trying to prevent.
zwaps|4 days ago
I think there are also licenses that do that, and revert to full MIT after some time, but the author decided to roll their own.
What’s the problem with that? He can license it however he wants and the reason he mentions is perfectly valid tbh
hungryhobbit|4 days ago
OSS licenses (and existing commercial ones) are tried and true (and re-used) for a reason, while your license very well may not even hold up in court!
I mean, I'm not a lawyer, and I assume you aren't either ... would you hire someone who isn't a programmer to write your code for you? Then why are you doing your own lawyering without a law degree?