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  1. Nov 4, 2022 · The Mozilla Public License (MPL) is a free and open-source weak copyleft license for most Mozilla Foundation software such as Firefox and Thunderbird The MPL license is developed and maintained by Mozilla, which seeks to balance the concerns of both open-source and proprietary developers; it is distinguished from others as a middle ground between the permissive software BSD-style licenses and ...

  2. A modified license is not the same license! While you have fairly amazing ability to specify your own licensing terms, and could in essence say "you can distribute this as per the GPL, but you need to put my name in your credits and pay me 1% of any revenue you generate", any time you do so you are creating a new license based on someone else's work.

  3. NETSCAPE PUBLIC LICENSEVersion 1.0. NETSCAPE PUBLIC LICENSE. Version 1.0. 1. Definitions. 1.1. ``Contributor'' means each entity that creates or contributes to the creation of Modifications. 1.2. ``Contributor Version'' means the combination of the Original Code, prior Modifications used by a Contributor, and the Modifications made by that ...

  4. These files are made available for historical and reference purposes only, and should not be used to license software. This is the Mozilla Public License, version 1.1. It is also available in plain text. MPL 1.1 is obsoleted by MPL 2.0, and Mozilla strongly recommends against using this license for new code. This is the FAQ for MPL 1.1.

  5. MOZILLA PUBLIC LICENSE . Version 1.0. 1. Definitions. 1.1. ``Contributor'' means each entity that creates or contributes to the creation of Modifications. 1.2. ``Contributor Version'' means the combination of the Original Code, prior Modifications used by a Contributor, and the Modifications made by that particular Contributor.

  6. MOZILLA PUBLIC LICENSE 1.0, Annotated. Below are two documents. On the left is the Mozilla Public License, a legal document. On the right is an attempt to explain what the license means in informal language. (The links in the license itself point to the appropriate section in the explanation list.) Note that these explanations are not the ...

  7. Step-by-Step Solution: See below how to convert this mixed number to a decimal: Step 1: divide numerator (1) by the denominator (5): 1 ÷ 5 = 0.2. Step 2: add this value to the the integer part: 1 + 0.2 = 1.2. So,

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