MIT License

MIT License/X11 license
AuthorMassachusetts Institute of Technology
VersionN/A
CopyrightMassachusetts Institute of Technology[source?]
Published1988
DFSG compatibleYes
Free softwareYes
OSI approvedYes
GPL compatibleYes
CopyleftNo
Linking from code with a different licenseYes

The MIT License is a free software license that was created at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). It is a permissive license, meaning that it allows programmers to put the code in proprietary software on the condition that the license is given with that software, and GPL-compatible, meaning that the GPL permits programmers to combine and redistribute it with software that uses the MIT License.

According to the Free Software Foundation, the MIT License is more accurately called the X11 license, since MIT has used many licenses for software and the license was first written for the X Window System.[1]

Software that use the MIT License include Expat, PuTTY, Mono development platform class libraries, Ruby on Rails, Cakephp, Twisted, Lua 5.0 onwards and the X Window System, which the license was written for.

Some software are dual licensed under the MIT License, such as older versions of the cURL library, which allowed recipients to choose either the Mozilla Public License or the MIT License.

  1. Stallman, Richard. "Various Licenses and Comments about Them". Free Software Foundation. Retrieved 2007-07-07.

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