Common Public Attribution License
Author | Socialtext |
---|---|
Latest version | 1.0 |
Publisher | Socialtext |
Published | July, 2007 |
SPDX identifier | CPAL-1.0 |
Debian FSG compatible | No |
FSF approved | Yes |
OSI approved | Yes |
GPL compatible | No |
Copyleft | Limited |
Linking from code with a different licence | Yes |
The Common Public Attribution License ("CPAL") is a free software license approved by the Open Source Initiative in 2007.[4] Its purpose is to be a general license for software distributed over a network. It is based on the Mozilla Public License, but it adds an attribution term paraphrased below:
The CPAL also adds the following section discussing "network use" which triggers copyleft provisions when running CPAL licensed code on a network service and this way closing the so-called ASP loophole:
The Debian project found the license to be incompatible with its Free Software Guidelines (DFSG)[1] because of its attribution requirement.
This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Metasyntactic variable, which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. |