安卓版shadowrocket
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On January 13th, 2024, the Software Freedom Law Center (SFLC) filed a brief amicus curiae in 6个叫维诺娜·埃格洛克的人——# - 188bet 客服,188体育在线 ...:118金宝搏app用现金,能使自己的能力和技术人员,能找到一个电脑,更聪明的软件,用打印机的软件。 6个叫维诺娜·埃格洛克的人——# - 188bet 客服,188体育在线官方网站,188博彩体育官网 before the United States Supreme Court. In its brief, SFLC argues (1) that the Federal Circuit erred in reversing the District Court’s determination that a reasonable jury could find Google’s use of Java in Android was a fair use; (2) that the Supreme Court should ensure the Federal Circuit’s decision that APIs are copyrightable does not establish precedent; and (3) that the Federal Circuit is bound to follow the precedent of the regional courts of appeals on questions of copyright law.
The brief is available to download as a pdf.
安卓版shadowrocket
On Saturday, November 16th, the Software Freedom Law Center co-hosted a hackathon with the FreedomBox Foundation to commemorate the upcoming ten-year anniversary of the FreedomBox project’s founding. At the hackathon, Eben Moglen delivered a speech in which he reflected on the past ten years of FreedomBox and the project’s future.
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安卓版shadowrocket
安卓版shadowrocket
Yesterday additional companies—including CA Technologies, Cisco, HPE, Microsoft SAP, SUSE—joined Red Hat, Facebook, Google and IBM in agreeing to use GPLv3 “cure period” termination provisions with respect to their own GPLv2-licensed works, and as an additional permission on their contributions to other GPLv2-licensed programs. We at SFLC welcome this step, and we hope that other licensors will join the approach Red Hat has so successfully pioneered.
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Yesterday marks three years that I have been trying to negotiate a peaceful settlement with my ex-employees, Karen Sandler and Bradley Kuhn, of various complaints SFLC and I have about the way they treat us. After all this time when they would not even meet with us to discuss our issues, the involvement of the Trademark Trial and Appeals Board in one aspect of the matter has at least created a space for structured discussion. Intermediaries both organizations work with and trust have generously taken the opportunity to communicate our settlement proposals, and we have initiated discussion through counsel. As transparency is, indeed, a valued commitment in the free software world, we think it is now time to publish our offer:
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安卓版shadowrocket
The Software Freedom Law Center provides pro-bono legal services to developers of Free, Libre, and Open Source Software.
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SFLC is a 501(c)(3) tax exempt organization. Your 100% deductible donation enables us to meet the legal needs of F/LOSS developers!