I was about to post a questionpost a question that touched on the edges of Software Licensing after carefully looking at the long list of Stack Exchange communities and determining that Stack Overflow would have the best demographic to answer the question. Before clicking submit, whilst double-google-checking that an answer to my question wasn't readily available, I discovered a relevant meta question about software licensing which suggests Software Licensing is off-topic at Stack Overflow.
In the spirit of SE, I have since decided to post my questionpost my question on a different StackExchange community which may arguably be more fitting, but I started to wonder: if Software Licensing is off topic, why are there so many relevant tags?
For example, in the context of my question: GPL, LGPL, Licensing
The description for the SO GPL tag states:
DO NOT USE, LICENSING / LEGAL ADVICE IS OFF TOPIC. The GNU General Public License is a copyleft free software license and is the most popular open source license. This tag is for questions related to the GNU General Public License that are not requests for legal advice.
However the accepted answer, by a very reputable contributor, in the previously mentioned meta post asserts simply that:
Software licensing is not on topic, as it is not a practical programming problem.
Like many before me, I am ultimately trying to understand why we have these 'license' tags, if questions relating to them are off-topic. If I have completely missed the point:
- Is this referenced Meta question answered in a misleading/incomplete way, or is the answer simply not authoritative?
- What types of licence questions are welcomed - and if the only acceptable type as alluded to by other licence tags is for questions relating to licensing servers, or licence system implementations; how does the fact the question is relevant to a licensing bear any difference on the practical programming problems endured once the legalities are removed, and why have specific tags like GPL and LGPL?