Non-copyleft Sometimes the word "permissive" is considered too ambiguous, because all free software licenses are "permissive", in the sense that they all allow to modify and redistribute the source code. In most cases the real opposition is between
copyleft licenses and non-copyleft ones, thus some authors prefer to use the term "non-copyleft" instead of "permissive".
Copycenter Copycenter is a term originally used to explain the
modified BSD license, a permissive free-software license. The term was presented by
computer scientist and
Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD) contributor
Marshall Kirk McKusick at a BSD conference in 1999. It is a
word play on
copyright,
copyleft and
copy center.
Pushover license In the
Free Software Foundation's guide to license compatibility and relicensing,
Richard Stallman defines permissive licenses as "
pushover licenses", comparing them to those people who "can't say no", because they are seen as granting a right to "deny freedom to others." The Foundation recommends pushover licenses only for small programs, below 300 lines of code, where "the benefits provided by copyleft are usually too small to justify the inconvenience of making sure a copy of the license always accompanies the software". ==See also==