There sure seems to be confusion here around what exactly the TCK or
JCK actually is. First off it is not a license. It is however a
technical compatability certification which guarantees technical
compatability between the different flavours of OpenJDK available out
there, like RedHats
(
https://www.redhat.com/en/resources/build-of-openjdk-datasheet)
Who signed the agreement (OTCLA) to get the TCK/JCK obviously
The license aspect is found at
https://openjdk.java.net/legal/OCTLA-JDK9+.pdf and is the agreement you
sign to get access to the certification toolkit.
Yes, everyone who distributes a version of OpenJDK does this, and I
would think outside of hobby or education purposes, if you develop in
Java you want this too.
Regards,
Stephen Snow
On Thu, 2022-05-26 at 12:55 +0200, Vitaly Zaitsev via devel wrote:
On 26/05/2022 00:02, Demi Marie Obenour wrote:
> IANAL, but I believe APIs are not eligible for
> trademark protection, so Fedora would only need to change the stuff
> that is*not* part of the API.
Yes. Google won a lawsuit against Oracle in the Supreme Court.
--
Sincerely,
Vitaly Zaitsev (vitaly(a)easycoding.org)
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