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In the UK the Queen approved the agreement on Thursday | The Global Dispatch

In the UK the Queen approved the agreement on Thursday. By contrast, GPLv3 and AGPLv3 each include clauses (in section 13 of each license) that together achieve a form of mutual compatibility for the two licenses. These clauses explicitly allow the “conveying” of a work formed by linking code licensed under the one license against code licensed under the other license,[3] despite the licenses otherwise not allowing relicensing under the terms of each other.[4] In this way, the copyleft of each license is relaxed to allow distributing such combinations.[4] This is why, by Black Duck’s own analysis of over two million open source projects, permissive licenses power over 50% of all open source projects (and even more if we recognize that GPL 2.0 licensing effectively acts like a permissive license in cloud computing contexts): Reading Black Duck Software’s newest paean to the Affero General Public License (AGPL) (“The Quietly Accelerating Adoption of the AGPL”), one could

Bojan Bogdanovic drops 48, Jazz beat Nuggets in thriller

Bojan Bogdanovic drops 48, Jazz beat Nuggets in thriller Share this story What a game. Two weeks before the NBA Playoffs kickoff, we got an absolute banger of a game in Vivint Arena tonight. The Jazz and Nuggets have had their fair share of absolute battles over the years, including a crazy playoff series last year in the bubble. Any time these teams play, it’s good TV. This game started off hot from the very start, with both teams hitting shots like crazy in the first quarter. The Nuggets hit 10 of their first 12 shots, and Jazz fans everywhere had to have been thinking they’d seen this one before. The Jazz matched the Nuggets offensive intensity however, and ended the quarter down just 1 point in an absolute barn-burner 41-40.

Government must say no to new coalmines, or risk damaging our climate and our international reputation

Government must say no to new coalmines, or risk damaging our climate and our international reputation 4 hr The government must close the door on new coalmines in the UK and signal we are transitioning to a net zero world. Without it the chances of delivering our goals at COP26 are slim. It’s not unusual for a planning application to be controversial in its own locality. But it is unusual for one to become the subject of international interest or the litmus test of a government’s commitment to meet net zero ambitions. The Whitehaven deep coalmine application has become both.

View from the Left: As human activity returns to abnormal, specters of climate change will widen our fault lines

NewsSportsEntertainmentLifestyleOpinionUSA TODAYObituariesE-EditionLegals OPINION View from the Left: As human activity returns to abnormal, specters of climate change will widen our fault lines By Scott Deshefy Without question climate change and the pandemic have permanently altered society. At some point, if we approach 85 to 90% herd immunity (an unlikely scenario in the U.S. given its intellectual and vaccine resistant laxities) mask-wearing might become an elective again, even in crowded venues. As COVID cases decline, however, were wisdom and ethics heritable memes in our culture, we’d still be donning masks in highly infectious settings, such as theaters and bars, sports arenas, public transit, grocery and department stores, hospitals and nursing homes. It’s been a hard lesson to learn, but Americans should by now be attuned to the ease with which airborne diseases can spread and the noninvasive logic of source control.

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