Copperspice licenses and proprietary applications
Copperspice licenses and proprietary applications
I wonder what the Copperspice position is on it being used to develop proprietary applications. Qt has a dual license arrangement. Basically Qt is open source unless you are using it to develop something that is proprietary (in which case you have to pay).
Re: Copperspice licenses and proprietary applications
The CopperSpice libraries are released under GNU GPL version 3 and LGPL version 2.1. We can not provide a proprietary license. If requested we can provide paid support or contract work to enhance CopperSpice.
LGPL version 2.1 absolutely allows developers the right to create and sell closed source applications.
Barbara
LGPL version 2.1 absolutely allows developers the right to create and sell closed source applications.
Barbara
Re: Copperspice licenses and proprietary applications
Thanks for clearing that point up. I note that Qt 5.7 has recently (16th June 2016) been released in which they have changed the license. LGPL 2.1 has been dropped. LGPL version 3 is used "for almost all frameworks and libraries" and GPL version 3 is used for tools such as Qt Creator.barbara wrote:The CopperSpice libraries are released under GNU GPL version 3 and LGPL version 2.1. We can not provide a proprietary license. If requested we can provide paid support or contract work to enhance CopperSpice.
LGPL version 2.1 absolutely allows developers the right to create and sell closed source applications.
Barbara
Re: Copperspice licenses and proprietary applications
As you mention, the Qt 5.7 release definitely changed their license model. CopperSpice will remain LGPL 2.1, and we will not be porting any features or examining code from Qt 5.7 or later for this reason. The only possible license change for CopperSpice would be if the opportunity arose to relicense under more permissive terms, such as a BSD/MIT style license.
We wish CopperSpice to be as open as possible for use by all kinds of applications, both open source and proprietary.
We wish CopperSpice to be as open as possible for use by all kinds of applications, both open source and proprietary.
Ansel Sermersheim
CopperSpice Cofounder
CopperSpice Cofounder