{ "isDeprecatedLicenseId": false, "licenseText": "Copyright and Licensing Information for ACE(TM), TAO(TM), CIAO(TM), DAnCE(TM), and CoSMIC(TM)\n\nACE(TM), TAO(TM), CIAO(TM), DAnCE\u003e(TM), and CoSMIC(TM) (henceforth referred to as \"DOC software\") are copyrighted by Douglas C. Schmidt and his research group at Washington University, University of California, Irvine, and Vanderbilt University, Copyright (c) 1993-2009, all rights reserved. Since DOC software is open-source, freely available software, you are free to use, modify, copy, and distribute--perpetually and irrevocably--the DOC software source code and object code produced from the source, as well as copy and distribute modified versions of this software. You must, however, include this copyright statement along with any code built using DOC software that you release. No copyright statement needs to be provided if you just ship binary executables of your software products.\n\nYou can use DOC software in commercial and/or binary software releases and are under no obligation to redistribute any of your source code that is built using DOC software. Note, however, that you may not misappropriate the DOC software code, such as copyrighting it yourself or claiming authorship of the DOC software code, in a way that will prevent DOC software from being distributed freely using an open-source development model. You needn\u0027t inform anyone that you\u0027re using DOC software in your software, though we encourage you to let us know so we can promote your project in the DOC software success stories.\n\nThe ACE, TAO, CIAO, DAnCE, and CoSMIC web sites are maintained by the DOC Group at the Institute for Software Integrated Systems (ISIS) and the Center for Distributed Object Computing of Washington University, St. Louis for the development of open-source software as part of the open-source software community. Submissions are provided by the submitter ``as is\u0027\u0027 with no warranties whatsoever, including any warranty of merchantability, noninfringement of third party intellectual property, or fitness for any particular purpose. In no event shall the submitter be liable for any direct, indirect, special, exemplary, punitive, or consequential damages, including without limitation, lost profits, even if advised of the possibility of such damages. Likewise, DOC software is provided as is with no warranties of any kind, including the warranties of design, merchantability, and fitness for a particular purpose, noninfringement, or arising from a course of dealing, usage or trade practice. Washington University, UC Irvine, Vanderbilt University, their employees, and students shall have no liability with respect to the infringement of copyrights, trade secrets or any patents by DOC software or any part thereof. Moreover, in no event will Washington University, UC Irvine, or Vanderbilt University, their employees, or students be liable for any lost revenue or profits or other special, indirect and consequential damages.\n\nDOC software is provided with no support and without any obligation on the part of Washington University, UC Irvine, Vanderbilt University, their employees, or students to assist in its use, correction, modification, or enhancement. A number of companies around the world provide commercial support for DOC software, however. DOC software is Y2K-compliant, as long as the underlying OS platform is Y2K-compliant. Likewise, DOC software is compliant with the new US daylight savings rule passed by Congress as \"The Energy Policy Act of 2005,\" which established new daylight savings times (DST) rules for the United States that expand DST as of March 2007. Since DOC software obtains time/date and calendaring information from operating systems users will not be affected by the new DST rules as long as they upgrade their operating systems accordingly.\n\nThe names ACE(TM), TAO(TM), CIAO(TM), DAnCE(TM), CoSMIC(TM), Washington University, UC Irvine, and Vanderbilt University, may not be used to endorse or promote products or services derived from this source without express written permission from Washington University, UC Irvine, or Vanderbilt University. This license grants no permission to call products or services derived from this source ACE(TM), TAO(TM), CIAO(TM), DAnCE(TM), or CoSMIC(TM), nor does it grant permission for the name Washington University, UC Irvine, or Vanderbilt University to appear in their names.\n\nIf you have any suggestions, additions, comments, or questions, please let me know.\n\nDouglas C. Schmidt\n", "standardLicenseTemplate": "\u003c\u003cbeginOptional\u003e\u003eCopyright and Licensing Information for ACE(TM), TAO(TM), CIAO(TM), DAnCE(TM), and CoSMIC(TM)\n\n\u003c\u003cendOptional\u003e\u003e\n\nACE(TM), TAO(TM), CIAO(TM), DAnCE\u003e(TM), and CoSMIC(TM) (henceforth referred to as \"DOC software\") are copyrighted by Douglas C. Schmidt and his research group at Washington University, University of California, Irvine, and Vanderbilt University, \u003c\u003cvar;name\u003d\"copyright\";original\u003d\"Copyright (c) 1993-2009, all rights reserved.\";match\u003d\".{0,5000}\"\u003e\u003e Since DOC software is open-source, freely available software, you are free to use, modify, copy, and distribute--perpetually and irrevocably--the DOC software source code and object code produced from the source, as well as copy and distribute modified versions of this software. You must, however, include this copyright statement along with any code built using DOC software that you release. No copyright statement needs to be provided if you just ship binary executables of your software products.\n\nYou can use DOC software in commercial and/or binary software releases and are under no obligation to redistribute any of your source code that is built using DOC software. Note, however, that you may not misappropriate the DOC software code, such as copyrighting it yourself or claiming authorship of the DOC software code, in a way that will prevent DOC software from being distributed freely using an open-source development model. You needn\u0027t inform anyone that you\u0027re using DOC software in your software, though we encourage you to let us know so we can promote your project in the DOC software success stories.\n\nThe ACE, TAO, CIAO, DAnCE, and CoSMIC web sites are maintained by the DOC Group at the Institute for Software Integrated Systems (ISIS) and the Center for Distributed Object Computing of Washington University, St. Louis for the development of open-source software as part of the open-source software community. Submissions are provided by the submitter ``as is\u0027\u0027 with no warranties whatsoever, including any warranty of merchantability, noninfringement of third party intellectual property, or fitness for any particular purpose. In no event shall the submitter be liable for any direct, indirect, special, exemplary, punitive, or consequential damages, including without limitation, lost profits, even if advised of the possibility of such damages. Likewise, DOC software is provided as is with no warranties of any kind, including the warranties of design, merchantability, and fitness for a particular purpose, noninfringement, or arising from a course of dealing, usage or trade practice. Washington University, UC Irvine, Vanderbilt University, their employees, and students shall have no liability with respect to the infringement of copyrights, trade secrets or any patents by DOC software or any part thereof. Moreover, in no event will Washington University, UC Irvine, or Vanderbilt University, their employees, or students be liable for any lost revenue or profits or other special, indirect and consequential damages.\n\nDOC software is provided with no support and without any obligation on the part of Washington University, UC Irvine, Vanderbilt University, their employees, or students to assist in its use, correction, modification, or enhancement. A number of companies around the world provide commercial support for DOC software, however. DOC software is Y2K-compliant, as long as the underlying OS platform is Y2K-compliant. Likewise, DOC software is compliant with the new US daylight savings rule passed by Congress as \"The Energy Policy Act of 2005,\" which established new daylight savings times (DST) rules for the United States that expand DST as of March 2007. Since DOC software obtains time/date and calendaring information from operating systems users will not be affected by the new DST rules as long as they upgrade their operating systems accordingly.\n\nThe names ACE(TM), TAO(TM), CIAO(TM), DAnCE(TM), CoSMIC(TM), Washington University, UC Irvine, and Vanderbilt University, may not be used to endorse or promote products or services derived from this source without express written permission from Washington University, UC Irvine, or Vanderbilt University. This license grants no permission to call products or services derived from this source ACE(TM), TAO(TM), CIAO(TM), DAnCE(TM), or CoSMIC(TM), nor does it grant permission for the name Washington University, UC Irvine, or Vanderbilt University to appear in their names.\n\nIf you have any suggestions, additions, comments, or questions, please let me know.\n\nDouglas C. Schmidt\n\n", "name": "DOC License", "licenseId": "DOC", "crossRef": [ { "match": "false", "url": "https://www.dre.vanderbilt.edu/~schmidt/ACE-copying.html", "isValid": true, "isLive": true, "timestamp": "2024-08-19T17:50:05Z", "isWayBackLink": false, "order": 1 }, { "match": "false", "url": "http://www.cs.wustl.edu/~schmidt/ACE-copying.html", "isValid": true, "isLive": true, "timestamp": "2024-08-19T17:50:05Z", "isWayBackLink": false, "order": 0 } ], "seeAlso": [ "http://www.cs.wustl.edu/~schmidt/ACE-copying.html", "https://www.dre.vanderbilt.edu/~schmidt/ACE-copying.html" ], "isOsiApproved": false, "licenseTextHtml": "\n \u003cdiv class\u003d\"optional-license-text\"\u003e \n \u003cp\u003eCopyright and Licensing Information for ACE(TM), TAO(TM), CIAO(TM), DAnCE(TM), and CoSMIC(TM)\u003c/p\u003e\n\n \u003c/div\u003e\n\n \u003cp\u003eACE(TM), TAO(TM), CIAO(TM), DAnCE\u0026gt;(TM), and CoSMIC(TM) (henceforth referred to as \u0026quot;DOC software\u0026quot;) are\n copyrighted by Douglas C. Schmidt and his research group at Washington University, University of\n California, Irvine, and Vanderbilt University, \u003cvar class\u003d\"replaceable-license-text\"\u003e Copyright (c) 1993-2009, all rights reserved.\u003c/var\u003e Since DOC\n software is open-source, freely available software, you are free to use, modify, copy, and\n distribute--perpetually and irrevocably--the DOC software source code and object code produced from\n the source, as well as copy and distribute modified versions of this software. You must, however,\n include this copyright statement along with any code built using DOC software that you release. No\n copyright statement needs to be provided if you just ship binary executables of your software\n products.\u003c/p\u003e\n\n \u003cp\u003eYou can use DOC software in commercial and/or binary software releases and are under no obligation to\n redistribute any of your source code that is built using DOC software. Note, however, that you may not\n misappropriate the DOC software code, such as copyrighting it yourself or claiming authorship of the\n DOC software code, in a way that will prevent DOC software from being distributed freely using an\n open-source development model. You needn\u0026apos;t inform anyone that you\u0026apos;re using DOC software in your\n software, though we encourage you to let us know so we can promote your project in the DOC software\n success stories.\u003c/p\u003e\n\n \u003cp\u003eThe ACE, TAO, CIAO, DAnCE, and CoSMIC web sites are maintained by the DOC Group at the Institute for\n Software Integrated Systems (ISIS) and the Center for Distributed Object Computing of Washington\n University, St. Louis for the development of open-source software as part of the open-source software\n community. Submissions are provided by the submitter ``as is\u0026apos;\u0026apos; with no warranties whatsoever,\n including any warranty of merchantability, noninfringement of third party intellectual property, or\n fitness for any particular purpose. In no event shall the submitter be liable for any direct,\n indirect, special, exemplary, punitive, or consequential damages, including without limitation, lost\n profits, even if advised of the possibility of such damages. Likewise, DOC software is provided as is\n with no warranties of any kind, including the warranties of design, merchantability, and fitness for a\n particular purpose, noninfringement, or arising from a course of dealing, usage or trade practice.\n Washington University, UC Irvine, Vanderbilt University, their employees, and students shall have no\n liability with respect to the infringement of copyrights, trade secrets or any patents by DOC software\n or any part thereof. Moreover, in no event will Washington University, UC Irvine, or Vanderbilt\n University, their employees, or students be liable for any lost revenue or profits or other special,\n indirect and consequential damages.\u003c/p\u003e\n\n \u003cp\u003eDOC software is provided with no support and without any obligation on the part of Washington University,\n UC Irvine, Vanderbilt University, their employees, or students to assist in its use, correction,\n modification, or enhancement. A number of companies around the world provide commercial support for\n DOC software, however. DOC software is Y2K-compliant, as long as the underlying OS platform is\n Y2K-compliant. Likewise, DOC software is compliant with the new US daylight savings rule passed by\n Congress as \u0026quot;The Energy Policy Act of 2005,\u0026quot; which established new daylight savings times (DST) rules\n for the United States that expand DST as of March 2007. Since DOC software obtains time/date and\n calendaring information from operating systems users will not be affected by the new DST rules as long\n as they upgrade their operating systems accordingly.\u003c/p\u003e\n\n \u003cp\u003eThe names ACE(TM), TAO(TM), CIAO(TM), DAnCE(TM), CoSMIC(TM), Washington University, UC Irvine, and\n Vanderbilt University, may not be used to endorse or promote products or services derived from this\n source without express written permission from Washington University, UC Irvine, or Vanderbilt\n University. This license grants no permission to call products or services derived from this source\n ACE(TM), TAO(TM), CIAO(TM), DAnCE(TM), or CoSMIC(TM), nor does it grant permission for the name\n Washington University, UC Irvine, or Vanderbilt University to appear in their names.\u003c/p\u003e\n\n \u003cp\u003eIf you have any suggestions, additions, comments, or questions, please let me know.\u003c/p\u003e\n\n \u003cp\u003eDouglas C. Schmidt\u003c/p\u003e\n\n " }