The GFDL was released in draft form for feedback in September 1999. After revisions, version 1.1 was issued in March 2000, version 1.2 in November 2002, and version 1.3 in November 2008. The current state of the license is version 1.3
The GNU Free Documentation License is a copyleft License for Free Documentation
The GNU Free Documentation License (GNU FDL or simply GFDL) is a copyleft license for free documentation, designed by the Free Software Foundation (FSF) for the GNU project. It is the counterpart to the GNU General Public License that gives readers the same rights to copy, redistribute and modify a work and requires all copies and derivatives to be available under the same license. Copies may also be sold commercially, but if produced in larger quantities (greater than 100) then the original document or source code must be made available to the work's recipient.
Mediawiki is a free wiki engine for wikis. Developed under the GNU Free Documentation License, it is used by the Wikimedia Foundation, which hosts Wikipedia, and Wikinews.
Open source software, software where the source code is publicly available and which is licensed with an open source license. Examples of free software license / open source licenses include the Apache License, BSD license, GNU General Public License, GNU Lesser General Public License, MIT License, Eclipse Public License and Mozilla Public License.
Open source software, software where the source code is publicly available and which is licensed with an open source license. Examples of free software license / open source licenses include the Apache License, BSD license, GNU General Public License, GNU Lesser General Public License, MIT License, Eclipse Public License and Mozilla Public License.
Open source software, software where the source code is publicly available and which is licensed with an open source license. Examples of free software license / open source licenses include the Apache License, BSD license, GNU General Public License, GNU Lesser General Public License, MIT License, Eclipse Public License and Mozilla Public License.
The license for CppUnit is released under a GNU Lesser General Public License, meaning it is a free software license, for use without the requirement of attributing the source code.
yes, just say no copyright infridgment
GNU Public License. "GNU" in turn is a recursive acronym standing for "GNUs Not Unix."
Copyright gives the author of a work the exclusive right to copy, alter, distribute, or perform/display the work. The GNU Free Documentation License 1.2 gives anyone permission to "copy, distribute, and/or modify" the work, as long as the resulting work is issued under the same license. Elsewhere in the license it is stated that public display is licensed as well. (Permission to lend is also explicitly given, although this is already allowed under copyright.) Thus, the rightsholder is essentially giving up all of his or her exclusive rights.However, as in any license, regardless of how broad, there are a significant number of caveats relating to attribution, modification, and separation of the license from the document.Note that the current GNU FDL is 3.0, released in 2007.
Some examples of words that begin with a silent "g" are gnome, gnaw, and gnash.
GNU is an operating system composed of free software. This operating system also has an icon which is a gnu,wildebeest head.GUJARAT NATIONAL UNIVERSITYGNU definition from gnu.org:The GNU Project was launched in 1984 to develop a complete Unix-like operating system which is free software: the GNU operating system.after some research i came to know GNU acronym is "GNU's not Unix" here GNU stands for "Genuinely Not Unix" Operating System.