#4
A license where you don't have access to the source code is called: Impaired source Closed source Open source Sourceless
Closed source
If a podcast is licensed under the CC BY-ND license, you may: (choose two) Use an interview or song from it for your own podcast Post it to your website Share it as long as you give credit to the author Sell it as part of a compilation Add ads to it and post it to your website.
Post it to your website Share it as long as you give credit to the author
Who founded the Open Source Initiative? (choose two) University of California at Berkeley Richard Stallman Bruce Perens Linus Torvalds Eric Raymond
Richard Stallman Eric Raymond
How can you make money from open source software? (choose three) Unlock premium features for people that pay Sell hardware that's built to work with the software Take payments for fixing bugs Charge a yearly fee for the right to use the software Provide paid consulting services for users
Sell hardware that's built to work with the software Take payments for fixing bugs Provide paid consulting services for users
Richard Stallman is associated with: BSD Unix Microsoft The Free Software Foundation The Apache foundation The Open Source Initiative
The Free Software Foundation
Source code refers to: The version of a program that the computer runs on the CPU The interface that software uses to talk to the kernel The license that dictates how you may use and share the software A human-readable version of computer software
A human-readable version of computer software
Linux source code is available to: Employees of the FBI, CIA and NSA with top secret clearance Anyone who has the knowledge needed to access it Only university researchers with a government grant Only employees of the Linux Foundation
Anyone who has the knowledge needed to access it
Which are examples of permissive software licenses? (choose two) BSD LGPLv3 GPLv3 GPLv2 MIT
BSD MIT
The largest difference between the GPLv2 and BSD licenses is: Nothing, they are virtually identical BSD has no copyleft provision GPLv2 requires assigning copyright to the FSF GPLv2 is not approved by the OSI Only BSD allows commercial use
BSD has no copyleft provision
Permissive free software licenses: (choose three) Can allow software to be used inside closed source software Include the GPLv2 and BSD Are not approved by the FSF Don't have a copyleft provision Are not approved by the OSI
Can allow software to be used inside closed source software Are not approved by the FSF Don't have a copyleft provision
A generic term for Open Source and Free Software is: SLOFF OS/FS FLOSS GPL Libre Software
FLOSS
Linux is distributed under which license? GPLv3 BSD Linux Foundation MIT GPLv2
GPLv2
Which of the following licenses was made by the FSF? Creative Commons GPLv3 Apache BSD MIT
GPLv3
A copyleft provision in a software license means: You may not link against third party closed source software If you redistribute the software, you must distribute the source to any changes you make You must provide free copies of the software if you use it You must provide support for your modifications You give up your copyright to the software
If you redistribute the software, you must distribute the source to any changes you make
The difference between the GPL and LGPL licenses are: LGPL applies to web services LGPL ensures that all variants of the original GPL program has the same freedom of use as the original LGPL allows you to distribute the software in binary-only form LGPL is shorter than GPL LGPL was made by the OSI while GPL was made by the FSF
LGPL ensures that all variants of the original GPL program has the same freedom of use as the original
A permissive free software license: (choose two) Means you can use the software for anything you want Does not allow the software to be locked to certain hardware Places the software in the public domain Places no restrictions on sharing modifications Requires you share software changes but not binaries
Means you can use the software for anything you want Places no restrictions on sharing modifications
The Creative Commons version of Public Domain licensing is: NoAttribution-ShareAlike (CC BY-SA) Attribution-NonCommercial (CC BY-NC) Attribution (CC BY) No Rights Reserved (CC0) Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike (CC BY-NC-SA)
No Rights Reserved (CC0)
The Free Software Foundation believes that: (choose two) Software should be free to modify Software should be free to share Software should not have copyright People should write software with no expectation of making money No money should ever change hands
Software should be free to modify Software should be free to share
Creative Commons licenses allow you to: (choose three) Specify whether or not people may distribute changes Receive royalties on the use of the work Allow or disallow commercial use Specify whether or not changes must be shared Get a veto on where the work is used
Specify whether or not people may distribute changes Allow or disallow commercial use Specify whether or not changes must be shared Get a veto on where the work is used
What does it mean when a work is placed in the public domain? The work was done by a government agency You may not use the work for commercial purposes The author has died The author has relinquished the copyright on the work You must redistribute changes to the software
The author has relinquished the copyright on the work
Open source means: (choose two) You can view the software's source code You must share your changes You can modify the software's source code You cannot charge anything for the software You must support the software you share
You can view the software's source code You can modify the software's source code
Your company makes a hardware firewall that runs a custom Linux kernel. What are your obligations under GPLv2? You must ensure your custom kernel runs on a regular Intel machine There are no requirements You must make the source to your kernel available You must make your hardware designs available You must make the source to your custom web interface available
You must make the source to your kernel available
Open source licenses differ, but generally agree that: (choose two) You are not allowed to sell the software You must redistribute your changes You should be able modify the software as you wish You should have access to the source code of software
You should be able modify the software as you wish You should have access to the source code of software
