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I’ve decided to completely revamp how I do copying information. Going
forward, this repo is going to be an exemplar. I’m going to (eventually)
make all of my repos declare their copying information similarly to how
this one does. My current system for declaring copying information is a
big and inconvenient compromise. This new system for declaring copying
information is less of a compromise

In the past, I had considered complying with the REUSE Spec [1] for all
of my repos. I had decided against doing that for several reasons:

1. REUSE requires that I call 🅭🄍 a license. 🅭🄍 is not a license, it’s a
public domain dedication [2]. Confusingly, 🅭🄍 contains a public fallback
license [3], and I’ve seen at least one person call 🅭🄍 a license to
indicate that their work is available under that fallback license [4]. I
don’t want to call 🅭🄍 a license because I want to make sure that the
work is dedicated to the public domain as much as it possibly can be.

2. The REUSE Tool made it difficult to include proper attribution for
🅭🄍, and the developers of the REUSE Tool didn’t seem interested in
making it easier [5].

3. The REUSE Spec required that all Covered Files that could contain
comments did contain comments [6]. Godot allows you to put comments in
`.tscn` files, but it will delete them when you save the scene from the
editor [7]. This made it really inconvenient to follow the REUSE Spec
while working on a Godot project [8].

Those reasons are why I ended up using my current system. Unfortunately,
my current system is kind of annoying. For one thing, there’s nothing
quite like the REUSE Tool for my current system. I created
assert_contains_regex [9] as a stopgap solution. Once I had a version of
assert_contains_regex that worked well on Windows, I was going to create
a tool for my system that was more comparable to the REUSE Tool. At this
point, I still haven’t made assert_contains_regex work well on Windows,
and I still haven’t created the tool that would replace it.

A big problem with my current system is that it’s not standardized at
all. It’s specific to me and only me. Theoretically, someone else could
implement it for their projects, but that seems really unlikely. It
would be nice if I could use something standardized like REUSE. Then, I
wouldn’t have to create my own tools.

I’ve been thinking about the three problems that I had with REUSE, and
I’ve come up with solutions for all of them:

1. I can write some boilerplate text that makes my intentions clear. I
can say that 🅭🄍 is a public domain dedication. I clarify that when I say
“SPDX-License-Identifier: CC0-1.0”, I mean “dedicated to the public
domain using 🅭🄍.”

2. Now that this annoying loophole [10] has been fixed, I no longer need
to provide attribution for 🅭🄍 [11].

3. Now that this issue has been fixed [12], unstable versions of the
REUSE Spec no longer have that requirement. I’m still waiting for a
stable release, though.

Having solutions to those three problems makes using REUSE a legitimate
option, and using REUSE is going to be much less work than maintaining
tools for my current system.

---

On an unrelated note, this commit creates a file named “copying.md”.
Normally, I would create a file named “COPYING.md”, but the REUSE Tool
ignores files whose names start with “COPYING” or “LICENSE”. If this
feature request [13] gets implemented, then I’ll rename the file to
“COPYING.md”.

[1]: <https://reuse.software/spec/>
[2]: <https://creativecommons.org/faq/#how-do-cc-licenses-operate>
[3]: <https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode.en#fallback>
[4]: <https://comment.ctrl.blog/discussion/creative-commons-unicode-fallback-font>
[5]: <fsfe/reuse-tool#410>
[6]: <fsfe/reuse-docs#122>
[7]: <https://docs.godotengine.org/en/stable/contributing/development/file_formats/tscn.html#file-structure>
[8]: <godotengine/godot-proposals#3509>
[9]: <https://pagure.io/assert_contains_regex>
[10]: <https://jasonyundt.website/posts/cc0-loophole-annoying-for-2-years.html>
[11]: <https://github.com/creativecommons/cc-legal-tools-data/tree/7fe72a9f6c241f6ae8059751793e3471dd4fcebe#copying>
[12]: <fsfe/reuse-docs#122 (comment)>
[13]: <fsfe/reuse-tool#881>
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121 changes: 121 additions & 0 deletions LICENSES/CC0-1.0.txt
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Creative Commons Legal Code

CC0 1.0 Universal

CREATIVE COMMONS CORPORATION IS NOT A LAW FIRM AND DOES NOT PROVIDE
LEGAL SERVICES. DISTRIBUTION OF THIS DOCUMENT DOES NOT CREATE AN
ATTORNEY-CLIENT RELATIONSHIP. CREATIVE COMMONS PROVIDES THIS
INFORMATION ON AN "AS-IS" BASIS. CREATIVE COMMONS MAKES NO WARRANTIES
REGARDING THE USE OF THIS DOCUMENT OR THE INFORMATION OR WORKS
PROVIDED HEREUNDER, AND DISCLAIMS LIABILITY FOR DAMAGES RESULTING FROM
THE USE OF THIS DOCUMENT OR THE INFORMATION OR WORKS PROVIDED
HEREUNDER.

Statement of Purpose

The laws of most jurisdictions throughout the world automatically confer
exclusive Copyright and Related Rights (defined below) upon the creator
and subsequent owner(s) (each and all, an "owner") of an original work of
authorship and/or a database (each, a "Work").

Certain owners wish to permanently relinquish those rights to a Work for
the purpose of contributing to a commons of creative, cultural and
scientific works ("Commons") that the public can reliably and without fear
of later claims of infringement build upon, modify, incorporate in other
works, reuse and redistribute as freely as possible in any form whatsoever
and for any purposes, including without limitation commercial purposes.
These owners may contribute to the Commons to promote the ideal of a free
culture and the further production of creative, cultural and scientific
works, or to gain reputation or greater distribution for their Work in
part through the use and efforts of others.

For these and/or other purposes and motivations, and without any
expectation of additional consideration or compensation, the person
associating CC0 with a Work (the "Affirmer"), to the extent that he or she
is an owner of Copyright and Related Rights in the Work, voluntarily
elects to apply CC0 to the Work and publicly distribute the Work under its
terms, with knowledge of his or her Copyright and Related Rights in the
Work and the meaning and intended legal effect of CC0 on those rights.

1. Copyright and Related Rights. A Work made available under CC0 may be
protected by copyright and related or neighboring rights ("Copyright and
Related Rights"). Copyright and Related Rights include, but are not
limited to, the following:

i. the right to reproduce, adapt, distribute, perform, display,
communicate, and translate a Work;
ii. moral rights retained by the original author(s) and/or performer(s);
iii. publicity and privacy rights pertaining to a person's image or
likeness depicted in a Work;
iv. rights protecting against unfair competition in regards to a Work,
subject to the limitations in paragraph 4(a), below;
v. rights protecting the extraction, dissemination, use and reuse of data
in a Work;
vi. database rights (such as those arising under Directive 96/9/EC of the
European Parliament and of the Council of 11 March 1996 on the legal
protection of databases, and under any national implementation
thereof, including any amended or successor version of such
directive); and
vii. other similar, equivalent or corresponding rights throughout the
world based on applicable law or treaty, and any national
implementations thereof.

2. Waiver. To the greatest extent permitted by, but not in contravention
of, applicable law, Affirmer hereby overtly, fully, permanently,
irrevocably and unconditionally waives, abandons, and surrenders all of
Affirmer's Copyright and Related Rights and associated claims and causes
of action, whether now known or unknown (including existing as well as
future claims and causes of action), in the Work (i) in all territories
worldwide, (ii) for the maximum duration provided by applicable law or
treaty (including future time extensions), (iii) in any current or future
medium and for any number of copies, and (iv) for any purpose whatsoever,
including without limitation commercial, advertising or promotional
purposes (the "Waiver"). Affirmer makes the Waiver for the benefit of each
member of the public at large and to the detriment of Affirmer's heirs and
successors, fully intending that such Waiver shall not be subject to
revocation, rescission, cancellation, termination, or any other legal or
equitable action to disrupt the quiet enjoyment of the Work by the public
as contemplated by Affirmer's express Statement of Purpose.

3. Public License Fallback. Should any part of the Waiver for any reason
be judged legally invalid or ineffective under applicable law, then the
Waiver shall be preserved to the maximum extent permitted taking into
account Affirmer's express Statement of Purpose. In addition, to the
extent the Waiver is so judged Affirmer hereby grants to each affected
person a royalty-free, non transferable, non sublicensable, non exclusive,
irrevocable and unconditional license to exercise Affirmer's Copyright and
Related Rights in the Work (i) in all territories worldwide, (ii) for the
maximum duration provided by applicable law or treaty (including future
time extensions), (iii) in any current or future medium and for any number
of copies, and (iv) for any purpose whatsoever, including without
limitation commercial, advertising or promotional purposes (the
"License"). The License shall be deemed effective as of the date CC0 was
applied by Affirmer to the Work. Should any part of the License for any
reason be judged legally invalid or ineffective under applicable law, such
partial invalidity or ineffectiveness shall not invalidate the remainder
of the License, and in such case Affirmer hereby affirms that he or she
will not (i) exercise any of his or her remaining Copyright and Related
Rights in the Work or (ii) assert any associated claims and causes of
action with respect to the Work, in either case contrary to Affirmer's
express Statement of Purpose.

4. Limitations and Disclaimers.

a. No trademark or patent rights held by Affirmer are waived, abandoned,
surrendered, licensed or otherwise affected by this document.
b. Affirmer offers the Work as-is and makes no representations or
warranties of any kind concerning the Work, express, implied,
statutory or otherwise, including without limitation warranties of
title, merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, non
infringement, or the absence of latent or other defects, accuracy, or
the present or absence of errors, whether or not discoverable, all to
the greatest extent permissible under applicable law.
c. Affirmer disclaims responsibility for clearing rights of other persons
that may apply to the Work or any use thereof, including without
limitation any person's Copyright and Related Rights in the Work.
Further, Affirmer disclaims responsibility for obtaining any necessary
consents, permissions or other rights required for any use of the
Work.
d. Affirmer understands and acknowledges that Creative Commons is not a
party to this document and has no duty or obligation with respect to
this CC0 or use of the Work.
32 changes: 32 additions & 0 deletions copying.md
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<!--
SPDX-License-Identifier: CC0-1.0
SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 2023 Jason Yundt <jason@jasonyundt.email>
REUSE-IgnoreStart
-->

# Copying Information for Jason’s Repo Checker

This repo complies with [this specific version of the REUSE Specification][1].

Please note that some items on [the SPDX License List][2] aren’t
necessarily licenses. For example, [`GPL-2.0-only` can act as a
contract][3] and [`CCO-1.0` is a public domain dedication][4]. If a file
contains `SPDX-License-Identifier: CC0-1.0` that doesn’t necessarily
mean that the file is licensed in anyway. You’ll need to look at
`CC0-1.0` to figure out the legal status of that file. Additionally, if
that file contains an `SPDX-FileCopyrightText` tag, that doesn’t
necessarily mean that the file is copyrighted. Again, you’ll need to
look at `CC0-1.0` for details.

All of this repo’s Git metadata (commit messages, annotated tags, hashes
etc.) is dedicated to the public domain using [🅭🄍1.0][5].

[1]: https://github.com/fsfe/reuse-docs/blob/0913b0a83b36c161966be1c5e70c81bdadfb8a69/spec.md
[2]: https://spdx.org/licenses/
[3]: https://sfconservancy.org/news/2022/may/16/vizio-remand-win/
[4]: https://wiki.spdx.org/view/Legal_Team/Decisions/Dealing_with_Public_Domain_within_SPDX_Files
[5]: https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

<!--
REUSE-IgnoreEnd
-->

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