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I think one way to signal that something isn't likely to be maintained, is in the licensing choice. Public Domain isn't a very good licence because of it's questionalble legal status, but in my mind, somehow, CC0 is more of a "do whatever you want, just don't blame me" than eg: a simple BSD/MIT license.

But I think perhaps the core isn't just the license, but also the readme, and guidelines on naming/"trademark": eg: when it comes to markdown, the issue (as mentioned in a sibling comment) was more one of "I don't think what you want do do deserves to be called 'markdown' -- that named was coined for my vision of 'rich plain text'".

I'm generally in favour of strong copyleft licences, because of the need to maintain user (as opposed to, in addition to developer) freedom. But when it comes to stuff that's basically just some ideas that maybe someone else might want to run with -- I think it's important to give them away as unrestricted as possible. Technically trivial snippets of code aren't under copyright -- but with how hostile the "intellectual property" climate is -- I think it's important to be clear when sharing something unfinished that if someone else builds on it, one will not retain any ownership of/claim on the result (beyond what copyright law forces one to keep, hence CC0 etc).




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