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= License Agreement =
= License =


For current legal and licensing related information for Fedora, see https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/legal/
= Legacy License Agreements =
* [[Legal/Licenses/LicenseAgreement21|  Fedora 21 License Agreement]]
* [[Legal/Licenses/LicenseAgreement20|  Fedora 20 License Agreement]]
* [[Legal/Licenses/LicenseAgreement19|  Fedora 19 License Agreement]]
* [[Legal/Licenses/LicenseAgreement18|  Fedora 18 License Agreement]]
* [[Legal/Licenses/LicenseAgreement17|  Fedora 17 License Agreement]]
* [[Legal/Licenses/LicenseAgreement16|  Fedora 16 License Agreement]]
* [[Legal/Licenses/LicenseAgreement15|  Fedora 15 License Agreement]]
* [[Legal/Licenses/LicenseAgreement14|  Fedora 14 License Agreement]]
* [[Legal/Licenses/LicenseAgreement14|  Fedora 14 License Agreement]]
* [[Legal/Licenses/LicenseAgreement13|  Fedora 13 License Agreement]]
* [[Legal/Licenses/LicenseAgreement13|  Fedora 13 License Agreement]]
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* [[Legal/Licenses/LicenseAgreement1|  Fedora Core 1 License Agreement]]  
* [[Legal/Licenses/LicenseAgreement1|  Fedora Core 1 License Agreement]]  


'''NOTE''':  In the past, Fedora used the acronym "EULA," for End User License Agreement, to inform people using Fedora about their rights and responsibilities.  However, that term is misleading because any end user can easily be a redistributor of Fedora, because of the way that free and open source software work.
'''NOTE''':  In the past, Fedora used the acronym "EULA," for End User License Agreement, to inform people using the Fedora operating system about their rights and responsibilities.  However, that term is misleading because any end user can easily be a redistributor of the Fedora operating system, because of the way that free and open source software work.

Latest revision as of 20:49, 27 July 2022

License

For current legal and licensing related information for Fedora, see https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/legal/


Legacy License Agreements

NOTE: In the past, Fedora used the acronym "EULA," for End User License Agreement, to inform people using the Fedora operating system about their rights and responsibilities. However, that term is misleading because any end user can easily be a redistributor of the Fedora operating system, because of the way that free and open source software work.