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Case Study 3: Wordpress & Woo

This educational report discusses the invitation to participate in open source programs by governments and public project maintainers. The focus is on protecting volunteer contributions in various jurisdictions, implementing diversity best practices, following SBOM (Software Bill of Materials) best practices, ensuring security infrastructure best practices for open source software, clarifying intellectual property rights, and establishing data protection and processing best practices for open source software. Additionally, it emphasizes the importance of project lifecycle governance.

Intellectual Property Name: Wordpress & associated plugins: Woocommerce

Open Source License: https://wordpress.org/about/license/

This space shall be updated soon.

Legal Bodies involved: https://automattic.com

Relevant:

The license under which the WordPress software is released is the GPLv2 (or later) from the Free Software Foundation. A copy of the license is included with every copy of WordPress, but you can also read the text of the license here.

Part of this license outlines requirements for derivative works, such as plugins or themes. Derivatives of WordPress code inherit the GPL license. Drupal, which has the same GPL license as WordPress, has an excellent page on licensing as it applies to themes and modules (their word for plugins).

There is some legal grey area regarding what is considered a derivative work, but we feel strongly that plugins and themes are derivative work and thus inherit the GPL license. If you disagree, you might want to consider a non-GPL platform such as Serendipity (BSD license) instead.

Maintained by Muellners Foundation, Denmark