Currently (due to the usage of pyJEO), the source code is published under the GNU GPL v3 license. However, I don't like the invasiveness of this license.
Cutting off the pyJEO bits should allow the code to be published under something less toxic (MIT license?).
Currently (due to the usage of
pyJEO
), the source code is published under the GNU GPL v3 license. However, I don't like the invasiveness of this license.Cutting off the
pyJEO
bits should allow the code to be published under something less toxic (MIT license?).