Appendix E Open Source Licences
NSA320 User’s Guide
560
insufficient. You must also send by surface mail a copyright release signed by a
company officer. A signed original of the copyright release should be mailed to:
Hwaci
6200 Maple Cove Lane
Charlotte, NC 28269
USA
A template copyright release is available in PDF or HTML. You can use this release
to make future changes
Copyright Release for
Contributions To SQLite
SQLite is software that implements an embeddable SQL database engine. SQLite
is available for free download from http://www.sqlite.org/. The principal author
and maintainer of SQLite has disclaimed all copyright interest in his contributions
to SQLite and thus released his contributions into the public domain. In order to
keep the SQLite software unencumbered by copyright claims, the principal author
asks others who may from time to time contribute changes and enhancements to
likewise disclaim their own individual copyright interest.
Because the SQLite software found at http://www.sqlite.org/ is in the public
domain, anyone is free to download the SQLite software from that website, make
changes to the software, use, distribute, or sell the modified software, under
either the original name or under some new name, without any need to obtain
permission, pay royalties, acknowledge the original source of the software, or in
any other way compensate, identify, or notify the original authors. Nobody is in
any way compelled to contribute their SQLite changes and enhancements back to
the SQLite website. This document concerns only changes and enhancements to
SQLite that are intentionally and deliberately contributed back to the SQLite
website.
For the purposes of this document, "SQLite software" shall mean any computer
source code, documentation, makefiles, test scripts, or other information that is
published on the SQLite website, http://www.sqlite.org/. Precompiled binaries are
excluded from the definition of "SQLite software" in this document because the
process of compiling the software may introduce information from outside sources
which is not properly a part of SQLite.
The header comments on the SQLite source files exhort the reader to share freely
and to never take more than one gives. In the spirit of that exhortation I make the
following declarations: