A Case for Public Domain
There was a time when you could just post a piece of code to usenet and say, "I give it away for free; perhaps it's useful for you."
Then came the lawyers.
There are building blocks in software engineering that are so basic that everyone should have free access to them without having to employ a complete legal department for advice. They should be FREE. Available for free, free of licensing implications, free of attached propaganda, free of everything but their useful self.
Today, even the term "free" has to be defined by several paragraphs of legal blah-blah.
Sick and tired of it, the author brought you this piece of software under a "license" that should not be neccessary in the first place: "Free" should have been enough.
Unfortunately, German law does not even allow to declare a work to be "in the Public Domain", so the "free for all" license I intended had to be made explicitly.
You can read the License here.
