diff --git a/www/conservancy/templates/frontpage.html b/www/conservancy/templates/frontpage.html index 7117589987f7f15b8c57d42fceb9f1f6e24c8d32..fba6fe4a7e9f2fb2211c5e9785b9e183d3029071 100644 --- a/www/conservancy/templates/frontpage.html +++ b/www/conservancy/templates/frontpage.html @@ -78,9 +78,8 @@ strategies that defend FOSS (such as copyleft).

Term of the week

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When companies utilize copylefted software, they thereby agree to the terms associated with its use. By utilizing copylefted software when designing products, companies agreed to these terms, and so have both contractual and copyright obligations to take certain actions to ensure others have the same rights they did with regard to the software.

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When rights are respected, the sharing of software under copyleft licensing is a mutually beneficial approach, but many companies are not holding up their side of the bargain. A company is in compliance when it ensures that all of its customers have the same rights, permission, and ability that it has to improve that software and install their improvements onto a device. The best way a company can demonstrate its intent to be in full compliance is by creating a vibrant third-party marketplace for improved software.

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Technology that serves its users, rather than the corporations who profit from it. Ethical technology preserves and promotes the rights of those impacted by it.

Visit our glossary of terms