Closed Atrate closed 3 years ago
Not having a license is on purpose because the bot is intended to be All Rights Reserved though I agree this could be specified more clearly in the README.
I would consider a license so long as the license prohibited the use of Friend Time for commercial purposes. I'm not aware of any open source license that does, so I decided not to include a license.
@KevinNovak You may want to check out the Commons Clause License for that: https://commonsclause.com/
As far as I understand, it's a clause that can be applied to any existing license (GPL, Apache, etc.) in order to prohibit using it for commercial purposes.
I ended up implementing the Apache 2.0 license with the Commons Clause. The license can now be found here. Thanks for the suggestion!
It would be beneficial if you included a LICENSE file for your project (and mentioned in the README it only applies to the code, not the image assets).
Without a LICENSE in place, the code is implicitly All Rights Reserved, which means people cannot fork your code and legally make contributions to your repo.
I would suggest, as I always do, the GPLv3. Here are the instructions for including a LICENSE in your repo: https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-howto.html