Appendix B. Open Source License List
Open Source Licenses
The following licenses[8] have been certified as Open Source by the Open Source Initiative. The license categories are from the Open Source Initiative’s License Proliferation Committee report.
For a list of current licenses, see the following sites:
http://opensource.org/licenses/category |
http:// opensource.org/licenses/alphabetical |
Licenses That Are Popular and Widely Used or with Strong Communities
We used statistics obtained from public sources to determine which licenses are widely used. We believed that there were a few licenses that, while not the most popular, were widely used within their communities and that these also belonged in this group.
Apache License, 2.0 |
New and Simplified BSD licenses |
GNU General Public License (GPL)(version 2) |
GNU Library or “Lesser” General Public License (LGPL) (version 2) |
MIT license |
Mozilla Public License 1.1 (MPL) |
Common Development and Distribution License |
Common Public License 1.0 |
Eclipse Public License |
Special Purpose Licenses
Certain licensors, such as schools and the U.S. government, have specialized concerns, such as specialized rules for government copyrights. Licenses that were identified as meeting a special need were placed in this group.
Educational Community License |
NASA Open Source Agreement 1.3 |
Open Group Test Suite License |
Other/Miscellaneous Licenses
Adaptive Public License |
Artistic License 2.0 |
Open Software License |
Qt Public License (QPL) |
zlib/libpng License |
Licenses That Are Redundant with ...
Get Intellectual Property and Open Source now with the O’Reilly learning platform.
O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.