← Back to context Comment by gunapologist99 12 hours ago Is this open source? No license. 3 comments gunapologist99 Reply boje 8 hours ago I'm surprised no one has noticed this yet. boje 8 hours ago Digging further, this has been shown before in 2020:https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23338538This is not directed at the quality of the project itself, however, which seems to be good. pantelisk 8 hours ago Author here. License is pretty much do whatever you want with it (free as in free information and free beer), I suppose the closest one to that would be MIT, but I don't like its serious legalese tone. I prefer the whimsical "free as in..." phrase
boje 8 hours ago I'm surprised no one has noticed this yet. boje 8 hours ago Digging further, this has been shown before in 2020:https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23338538This is not directed at the quality of the project itself, however, which seems to be good. pantelisk 8 hours ago Author here. License is pretty much do whatever you want with it (free as in free information and free beer), I suppose the closest one to that would be MIT, but I don't like its serious legalese tone. I prefer the whimsical "free as in..." phrase
boje 8 hours ago Digging further, this has been shown before in 2020:https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23338538This is not directed at the quality of the project itself, however, which seems to be good.
pantelisk 8 hours ago Author here. License is pretty much do whatever you want with it (free as in free information and free beer), I suppose the closest one to that would be MIT, but I don't like its serious legalese tone. I prefer the whimsical "free as in..." phrase
I'm surprised no one has noticed this yet.
Digging further, this has been shown before in 2020:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23338538
This is not directed at the quality of the project itself, however, which seems to be good.
Author here. License is pretty much do whatever you want with it (free as in free information and free beer), I suppose the closest one to that would be MIT, but I don't like its serious legalese tone. I prefer the whimsical "free as in..." phrase