There has never been a better time to get involved and advance the state of the art in free software office suites." ![]() So, ultimately, TDF says that it's "neutral" for the foundation which "remains open to every company, individual or foundation that wishes to participate in co-development. The Document Foundation believes that commercially-friendly, copy-left licensing provides the best path to constructive participation in, and growth of the project. The Apache License is compatible with both the LGPLv3+ and MPL licenses, allowing TDF future flexibility to move the entire codebase, to MPLv2 or future LGPL license versions. On the bright side, one benefit of this arrangement is the potential for future-proof licensing. ![]() The Document Foundation, the organization behind LibreOffice, has issued a statement, and says that it "regrets the missed opportunity" to reunite the projects, but looks at the bright side:
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