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Licenses/GNU FDL 1.2: Difference between revisions
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=== Copy of the License === | === Copy of the License === |
Revision as of 16:35, 28 December 2008
The GNU Free Documentation License is the license created by the Free Software Foundation and the GNU Project in order to be used for software documentation.
A work licensed in this way grants all the four freedoms listed in the definition of free cultural works:
The license places some key restrictions on those freedoms:
AttributionYou must give proper attribution to the author and retain the license notice. |
Invariant sectionsInvariant sections are a special provision of the GFDL which, if used, prevent anyone from modifying the parts of the work which are defined as "invariant". |
Source CodeWhen the work or part of it is generated by computation from a modifiable structured form as Source Code (e.g. textual), it must be made available to recipients of the work. |
No DRM or TPMYou must not restrict access to the work using technical measures, or otherwise attempt to impose limitations on the freedoms above. |
CopyleftYou must release derivative works under an identical or similar license |
Copy of the LicenseYou must include an unaltered copy of the license with every verbatim or modified copy of the work. |
Legal code
The above human readable summary does not constitute an actual grant of license; please review http://www.gnu.org/licenses/fdl-1.2.html for the legal code of the license. When distributing a work, it must be accompanied with the full text of the actual license.