Mississippi GNU Lesser General Public License

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Control #:
US-CP0741
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Description

This license contains the terms and conditions needed to make free software libraries
available to the public. With this license, the software can be changed under certain
conditions and redistributed.

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FAQ

The GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL) is a member of the GNU family of open source licenses, along with the GNU GPL v2, the GNU GPL v3, and the GNU AGPL License.

Applying LGPL to a library ensures that the library itself and any modified versions of it will remain open source. But it can be used by closed source software.

Short answer is yes, you can sell your application under any license you like.

Software under the GPL may be run for all purposes, including commercial purposes and even as a tool for creating proprietary software, such as when using GPL-licensed compilers. Users or companies who distribute GPL-licensed works (e.g. software), may charge a fee for copies or give them free of charge.

You can license your commercial application under the GPLv3 license as long as you comply with the terms of the GPLv3 license. You may discover, however that these terms do not work so well in your favor, since one of the terms prevents you from adding restrictions to the license.

ANSWER: You can if you want to. You don't have to. You could modify it, but when you distribute your application you are obliged to make your source available and also the source for the modifications you made to the library.

Now you may think you already do this, but looking at the licenses, I see little to no difference between GPL and LGPL unless I really study it (or already know the difference)LGPL is not viral like GPL.

Can you sell GPL software/code? Yes, the GPL license allows users to sell the original as well as the modified software.

There is no field of use restriction in the GPLv2 - users are free to use if however they like, including for commercial purposes.

1 (LGPL v2. 1 for short) is a variation of the regular GNU General Public License (GPL). Originally known as the GNU Library General Public License, it was drafted by the Free Software Foundation (FSF) to provide a weaker (or Lesser) form of copyleft for use in certain specific circumstances.

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Mississippi GNU Lesser General Public License