Thank you for the link :)
Zion
- 1 Post
- 8 Comments
Hi. I answered this question here: https://lemmy.world/comment/4851408
Thanks for the info. I replied to your question in a similar comment here: https://lemmy.world/comment/4851408
I replied to a similar question below. Here it is:
Thanks. To be honest, I couldn’t care less if people use parts of my code in commercial programs.
The only thing I’m trying to prevent is someone taking the entire project, changing some strings and icons and releasing a paid Android version based on my work. Especially as I will be releasing mobile versions myself after the desktop versions for free.
Thanks. To be honest, I couldn’t care less if people use parts of my code in commercial programs.
The only thing I’m trying to prevent is someone taking the entire project, changing some strings and icons and releasing a paid Android version based on my work. Especially as I will be releasing mobile versions myself after the desktop versions for free.
Zion@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•Flatpak standing the test of time: modern Flatpak apps running on Ubuntu 16.04 ESM, a 7-year-old distro4·2 years agoHave you tried flatseal?
Zion@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•Glibc Dynamic Loader Hit By A Nasty Local Privilege Escalation Vulnerability2·2 years agoI thought you were joking until I clicked the link.
Thanks for the replies everyone. I’ve decided to not let my concerns overcome the most important thing of releasing the project as fully open source.
Just going to go with GPLv3 and not worry about the clones that will happen regardless of the license type, if the program becomes popular.
Thank you all for your insight and for helping me come to what I believe to be the best decision.