quinception.com

Links and jots of Quinn – web & search marketing and more

Browsing in CMS stuff (all shapes)

Eric Raymond open source advocate and the man who inspired the opening up of Netscape/Mozilla with The Cathedral and the Bazaar comments on downsides of the GPL:

The GPL may be a community-building signalling device, but it is also a confession of fear and weakness. To believe that it matters, you have to believe that you live in a Type A universe where closed-source development is such an attractive proposition that you have to punish people for trying to move to it.

The Economic Case Against the GPL

There is some debate about whether Wordpress plugins and Joomla extensions have to have a GPL compatible license.

The issue tends to get muddied because there are three issues rolled into one:

  • Software licence – Does the GPL allow extensions or plugins to be developed using non-GPL licenses?
  • Listing repository policies – Do the owners of the relevant extension/repository directories allow non-GPL licensed plugins or extensions?
  • Trademark enforcement – Can the owners of the relevant trademarks prevent the trademarks being used in the names of extensions, domain names and other marketing materials?

GPL License and plugins extensions

The GPL license states:

These requirements apply to the modified work as a whole. If
identifiable sections of that work are not derived from the Program,
and can be reasonably considered independent and separate works in
themselves, then this License, and its terms, do not apply to those
sections when you distribute them as separate works. But when you
distribute the same sections as part of a whole which is a work based
on the Program, the distribution of the whole must be on the terms of this License, whose permissions for other licensees extend to the entire whole, and thus to each and every part regardless of who wrote it.

The Free Software Foundation (the GPL authors) believe that most plugins will be covered.

If the program dynamically links plug-ins, and they make function calls to each other and share data structures, we believe they form a single program, which must be treated as an extension of both the main program and the plug-ins. This means the plug-ins must be released under the GPL or a GPL-compatible free software license, and that the terms of the GPL must be followed when those plug-ins are distributed.

Joomla and Wordpress core developers also believe that plugins or extensions must be licenced under GPL.

This quote from Joomla FAQs:

It is our opinion that most extensions are derivative works of Joomla! and must be licensed under the GNU GPL. It is possible that an extension could work within Joomla! and not be considered a derivative work according to copyright law but this would have to be evaluated on a case-by-case basis. If you believe your extension is not a derivative work we strongly recommend that you seek professional legal advice.

There is an interesting thread on how the Joomla GPL policy has evolved at the Joomla Forums Be warned it will take a least a few hours to read it all!

See also comments about Wordpress plugins:

While others comments are that plugins are not required to licensed under GPL:

If you were hoping for a definitive answer then I have to let you down. It depends on how closely a plugin is integrated with the original system! A legal opinion is required.

Commercial decisions on repositories

The owners of the relevant repositories have complete commercial freedom to determine which plugins / extensions they will list in their repositories.

Both Joomla Extensions Directory and the Wordpress Plugins directory require submissions to be GPL compatible.

The impact for developers is that it will be hard to promote an extension without being listed on the relevant sites.

Use of trademark

Both Joomla and Wordpress restrict the use of their respective trademarks.

This may impact on your ability to use the trademarked words in domains, product names and marketing materials.
Joomla trademark restrictions FAQs
Wordpress domains policy
Discussion about Wordpress trademarks

You may be able to use trademarks under Fair Use of Trademarks rules. For example under Nominative Use you may refer to a trademark name as long as you don’t imply a relationship with the trademark holder.

DISCLAIMER: This article is not intended to give legal advice. If you have any questions about about usage of trademarks or licenses you should engage a lawyer to obtain advice specific to your circumstances

An excellent explanation of how Trackbacks and Pingbacks work in Wordpress
WordPress Trackback Tutorial

When used properly, trackbacks and pingbacks are an excellent way to build links and traffic to your blog, as well as building relationships with other bloggers.

I’ve decided (finally) to open up the blog to comments. Until now, its been more of a collection of links and thoughts. So here’s what I’m doing.
1. Allowing comments even if not registered
2. Adding the Askimet spam filter
3. Using tan tan noodles spam filter and CAPTCHA, to prevent comments being logged, and providing CAPTCHA instead

If a comment gets rejected, then an error screen will be shown with an explanation of why the comment was rejected. An optional captcha (provided by reCAPTCHA) can also be configured to display, which allows people to confirm that their comment is indeed legitimate. The plugin also works in conjunction with Akismet and will display a captcha if Akismet flags a comment as spam (see second screenshot). In all cases, the captcha is displayed only if a comment doesn’t pass the obvious spam rules or if Akismet thinks a comment is spam. Comments that don’t pass the captcha are immediately rejected and discarded.

In response to a steady stream of requests, we’ve compiled a list of web design and software development firms who have experience with WordPress based projects

WordPress Consultants

A framework fro thinking about search optimisation in Joomla

WordPress MU, short for Multi-User, is a WordPress version that you probably have used without really knowing it. Automattic’s hosted blog service, WordPress.com, uses WordPress MU, although what you get when signing up with WordPress.com is pretty far from your basic WordPress MU install.
Using WordPress MU to Power Multiple Blogs | Devlounge

Flash gallery based CMS – with included WordPress blog. If you don’t need CMS and are very visual portfolio based business … it’s pretty cool.

clickbooq

All clickbooq websites include an impressive range of features and control.
Every site you see here was built using our standard features. Nothing was added on for an additional fee. With clickbooq, what you see is what you get. Refresh your browser window to see even more examples.

Some are free, some are hosted, and some are industry specific. All of these platforms are quite different from one another, but all have some great attributes. Well, at least most of them.50 Content Management Systems | OpenJason

Excellent sortable themes site:
wpSnap – Best WordPress Themes, Blogging Tips, Design Resources

Smashing Magazine has lots of resources for WP design, and some exclusive themes.

And some Unusual Wordpress Themes here

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