DFD Whatever 1.2 license Created April 24, 2026 by Jacob Persico DBA Delta Fox Design: Anyone can use this license. Anyone can give away or sell the software. Anyone can make derivative works of the software and give those away, sell them or keep them private. You must give the original author credit. Giving credit can be done by including a text file giving credit with the software (that has a name clearly indicating it gives credit, example: "Copyright.txt"), by having the source code contain credit at the beginning (if the source code is included and readable with the software) or by the software having a feature to display the credit. The method you use must be consistent with the way the original software is made if possible and if using a feature to display the credit that feature can not be hidden. One example of "not be hidden" is you can have the software display the credit when run. The credit should be available where there is actual access to the software and/or source code it's self, so if you are running it server side (for example server side web code or a server side program) it does not have to show the credit to the client computers accessing it, unless one or both of: 1. Doing so is consistent with the original software. 2. The server reports the name of the software. Giving credit must include mentioning the following information of the original author's software (if a derivative then this should be based on the original author's software that this software is a derivative of): Software name, version number, copyright, author and year of copyright. The credit must include that this license (the "DFD Whatever 1.0 license") is used and must include this license text in full verbatim (preferably as this "DFD Whatever 1.0 license.txt" file). Oh and there is no warranty or guaranty of the software unless otherwise specified. Any applicable copyright laws that override any of this take precedence but anything in this license that they do not override still remains valid. Derivative works: Anything new added by the derivative works are attributed to the author who added it and protected under copyright law the same way it would be if they created it separate from the original. Unless the author who made these additions specifies otherwise.