Katana VentraIP

Free license

A free license or open license[1][2] is a license which allows others to reuse another creator’s work as they wish. Without a special license, these uses are normally prohibited by copyright, patent or commercial license. Most free licenses are worldwide, royalty-free, non-exclusive, and perpetual (see copyright durations). Free licenses are often the basis of crowdsourcing and crowdfunding projects.

For other uses, see Free license (disambiguation).

The invention of the term "free license" and the focus on the rights of users were connected to the sharing traditions of the hacker culture of the 1970s public domain software ecosystem, the social and political free software movement (since 1980) and the open source movement (since the 1990s).[3] These rights were codified by different groups and organizations for different domains in Free Software Definition, Open Source Definition, Debian Free Software Guidelines, Definition of Free Cultural Works and The Open Definition.[1] These definitions were then transformed into licenses, using the copyright as legal mechanism. Ideas of free/open licenses have since spread into different spheres of society.


Open source, free culture (unified as free and open-source movement), anticopyright, Wikimedia Foundation projects, public domain advocacy groups and pirate parties are connected with free and open licenses.

Public domain

Creative Commons CC0

Permissive licenses

Apache License

Copyleft

GNU GPL

License compatibility

License proliferation

Open software licenses

Open licenses

Various Licenses and Comments about Them – GNU Project – Free Software Foundation

Licenses - Definition of Free Cultural Works

proposed Open Source Hardware (OSHW) Statement of Principles and Definition v1.0