Cisco Cisco StadiumVision Mobile Streamer Información de licencia
distributing them as binaries would be to violate the GPL license - unless
you
accompany your license with an exception[2]. This particular problem was
addressed when the Modified BSD license was created, which does not have the
annoncement clause that collides with GPL.
libcurl http://curl.haxx.se/docs/copyright.html
Uses an MIT (or Modified BSD)-style license that is as liberal as
possible. Some of the source files that deal with KRB4 have Original
BSD-style announce-clause licenses. You may not distribute binaries
with krb4-enabled libcurl that also link with GPL-licensed code!
OpenSSL http://www.openssl.org/source/license.html
(May be used for SSL/TLS support) Uses an Original BSD-style license
with an announement clause that makes it "incompatible" with GPL. You
are not allowed to ship binaries that link with OpenSSL that includes
GPL code (unless that specific GPL code includes an exception for
OpenSSL - a habit that is growing more and more common). If OpenSSL's
licensing is a problem for you, consider using GnuTLS or yassl
instead.
GnuTLS http://www.gnutls.org/
(May be used for SSL/TLS support) Uses the LGPL[3] license. If this
is
a problem for you, consider using OpenSSL instead. Also note that
GnuTLS itself depends on and uses other libs (libgcrypt and
libgpg-error) and they too are LGPL- or GPL-licensed.
yassl http://www.yassl.com/
(May be used for SSL/TLS support) Uses the GPL[1] license. If this is
a problem for you, consider using OpenSSL or GnuTLS instead.
c-ares http://daniel.haxx.se/projects/c-ares/license.html
(Used for asynchronous name resolves) Uses an MIT license that is
very
liberal and imposes no restrictions on any other library or part you
may link with.
zlib http://www.gzip.org/zlib/zlib_license.html
(Used for compressed Transfer-Encoding support) Uses an MIT-style
license that shouldn't collide with any other library.
krb4
While nothing in particular says that a Kerberos4 library must use
any
particular license, the one I've tried and used successfully so far
(kth-krb4) is partly Original BSD-licensed with the announcement
clause. Some of the code in libcurl that is written to deal with
Kerberos4 is Modified BSD-licensed.
you
accompany your license with an exception[2]. This particular problem was
addressed when the Modified BSD license was created, which does not have the
annoncement clause that collides with GPL.
libcurl http://curl.haxx.se/docs/copyright.html
Uses an MIT (or Modified BSD)-style license that is as liberal as
possible. Some of the source files that deal with KRB4 have Original
BSD-style announce-clause licenses. You may not distribute binaries
with krb4-enabled libcurl that also link with GPL-licensed code!
OpenSSL http://www.openssl.org/source/license.html
(May be used for SSL/TLS support) Uses an Original BSD-style license
with an announement clause that makes it "incompatible" with GPL. You
are not allowed to ship binaries that link with OpenSSL that includes
GPL code (unless that specific GPL code includes an exception for
OpenSSL - a habit that is growing more and more common). If OpenSSL's
licensing is a problem for you, consider using GnuTLS or yassl
instead.
GnuTLS http://www.gnutls.org/
(May be used for SSL/TLS support) Uses the LGPL[3] license. If this
is
a problem for you, consider using OpenSSL instead. Also note that
GnuTLS itself depends on and uses other libs (libgcrypt and
libgpg-error) and they too are LGPL- or GPL-licensed.
yassl http://www.yassl.com/
(May be used for SSL/TLS support) Uses the GPL[1] license. If this is
a problem for you, consider using OpenSSL or GnuTLS instead.
c-ares http://daniel.haxx.se/projects/c-ares/license.html
(Used for asynchronous name resolves) Uses an MIT license that is
very
liberal and imposes no restrictions on any other library or part you
may link with.
zlib http://www.gzip.org/zlib/zlib_license.html
(Used for compressed Transfer-Encoding support) Uses an MIT-style
license that shouldn't collide with any other library.
krb4
While nothing in particular says that a Kerberos4 library must use
any
particular license, the one I've tried and used successfully so far
(kth-krb4) is partly Original BSD-licensed with the announcement
clause. Some of the code in libcurl that is written to deal with
Kerberos4 is Modified BSD-licensed.