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OUT
OF
THE
USE
OR
INABILITY
TO
USE
THE
PROGRAM
(INCLUDING
BUT
NOT
LIMITED
TO
LOSS
OF
DATA
OR
DATA
BEING
RENDERED
INACCURATE
OR
LOSSES
SUSTAINED
BY
YOU
OR
THIRD
PARTIES
OR
A
FAILURE
OF
THE
PROGRAM
TO
OPERATE
WITH
ANY
OTHER
PROGRAMS),
EVEN
IF
SUCH
HOLDER
OR
OTHER
PARTY
HAS
BEEN
ADVISED
OF
THE
POSSIBILITY
OF
SUCH
DAMAGES.
END
OF
TERMS
AND
CONDITIONS
How
to
Apply
These
Terms
to
Your
New
Programs
If
you
develop
a
new
program,
and
you
want
it
to
be
of
the
greatest
possible
use
to
the
public,
the
best
way
to
achieve
this
is
to
make
it
free
software
which
everyone
can
redistribute
and
change
under
these
terms.
To
do
so,
attach
the
following
notices
to
the
program.
It
is
safest
to
attach
them
to
the
start
of
each
source
file
to
most
effectively
convey
the
exclusion
of
warranty;
and
each
file
should
have
at
least
the
"copyright"
line
and
a
pointer
to
where
the
full
notice
is
found.
<one
line
to
give
the
program's
name
and
a
brief
idea
of
what
it
does.>
Copyright
(C)
<year>
<name
of
author>
This
program
is
free
software;
you
can
redistribute
it
and/or
modify
it
under
the
terms
of
the
GNU
General
Public
License
as
published
by
the
Free
Software
Foundation;
either
version
2
of
the
License,
or
(at
your
option)
any
later
version.
This
program
is
distributed
in
the
hope
that
it
will
be
useful,
but
WITHOUT
ANY
WARRANTY;
without
even
the
implied
warranty
of
MERCHANTABILITY
or
FITNESS
FOR
A
PARTICULAR
PURPOSE.
See
the
GNU
General
Public
License
for
more
details.
You
should
have
received
a
copy
of
the
GNU
General
Public
License
along
with
this
program;
if
not,
write
to
the
Free
Software
Foundation,
Inc.,
59
Temple
Place,
Suite
330,
Boston,
MA
02111-1307
USA
Also
add
information
on
how
to
contact
you
by
electronic
and
paper
mail.
If
the
program
is
interactive,
make
it
output
a
short
notice
like
this
when
it
starts
in
an
interactive
mode:
Gnomovision
version
69,
Copyright
(C)
year
name
of
author
Gnomovision
comes
with
ABSOLUTELY
NO
WARRANTY;
for
details
type
`show
w'.
This
is
free
software,
and
you
are
welcome
to
redistribute
it
under
certain
conditions;
type
`show
c'
for
details.
The
hypothetical
commands
`show
w'
and
`show
c'
should
show
the
appropriate
parts
of
the
General
Public
License.
Of
course,
the
commands
you
use
may
be
called
something
other
than
`show
w'
and
`show
c';
they
could
even
be
mouse-clicks
or
menu
items--whatever
suits
your
program.
You
should
also
get
your
employer
(if
you
work
as
a
programmer)
or
your
school,
if
any,
to
sign
a
"copyright
disclaimer"
for
the
program,
if
necessary.
Here
is
a
sample;
alter
the
names:
Yoyodyne,
Inc.,
hereby
disclaims
all
copyright
interest
in
the
program
`Gnomovision'
(which
makes
passes
at
compilers)
written
by
James
Hacker.
<signature
of
Ty
Coon>,
1
April
1989
Ty
Coon,
President
of
Vice
This
General
Public
License
does
not
permit
incorporating
your
program
into
proprietary
programs.
If
your
program
is
a
subroutine
library,
you
may
consider
it
more
useful
to
permit
linking
proprietary
applications
with
the
library.
If
this
is
what
you
want
to
do,
use
the
GNU
Library
General
Public
License
instead
of
this
License.
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