Difference between isc license and mit license
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The ISC license is a permissive free software license written by the Internet Systems Consortium (ISC). It is meant to be functionally equivalent to the simplified BSD and the MIT licenses, differing in its removal of language deemed unnecessary following the global adoption of the Berne Convention.
MIT also explicitly allows sublicensing, whereas ISC does not.
While (to the best of my knowledge) ISC does not disallow it (so long as the original license is around somewhere), sublicensing is scary to a majority of non-lawyer developers.
So if one wants the possibility for sublicensing to be open, MIT should be preferable (for the sake of clarity to the general user). If not, ISC is simpler and (due to the above) at the very least discourages such behaviour.
Hope it will help u
MIT also explicitly allows sublicensing, whereas ISC does not.
While (to the best of my knowledge) ISC does not disallow it (so long as the original license is around somewhere), sublicensing is scary to a majority of non-lawyer developers.
So if one wants the possibility for sublicensing to be open, MIT should be preferable (for the sake of clarity to the general user). If not, ISC is simpler and (due to the above) at the very least discourages such behaviour.
Hope it will help u
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