cara/open-source-licences
2024-02-11 17:40:47 +01:00
..
license_distribution.png reference on README 2023-10-27 16:34:56 +02:00
license_pie_chart.py reference on README 2023-10-27 16:34:56 +02:00
README.md add PyInstrument and cProfile profilers 2024-02-11 17:40:47 +01:00

Open Source Acknowledgments

Disclaimer

The following list includes the open-source dependencies used in this project, along with their respective licenses. It covers both the core dependencies explicitly specified in the project's requirements, as well as their transitive dependencies (dependencies of dependencies).

Including transitive dependencies is essential to acknowledge the full spectrum of open-source contributions that contribute to the functionality of this project. It also ensures compliance with open-source licenses and recognizes the efforts of all contributors, even those indirectly involved.

CAiMIRA tool is Open Source

Back-end (Python) Dependencies

anyio 4.0.0

appnope 0.1.3

argon2-cffi 23.1.0

argon2-cffi-bindings 21.2.0

arrow 1.3.0

asttokens 2.4.0

async-lru 2.0.4

attrs 23.1.0

Babel 2.12.1

backcall 0.2.0

beautifulsoup4 4.12.2

bleach 6.0.0

certifi 2023.7.22

cffi 1.16.0

charset-normalizer 3.3.0

cloudpickle 2.2.1

comm 0.1.4

contourpy 1.1.1

cycler 0.12.0

debugpy 1.8.0

decorator 5.1.1

defusedxml 0.7.1

exceptiongroup 1.1.3

executing 2.0.0

fastjsonschema 2.18.1

filelock 3.12.4

fonttools 4.43.0

fqdn 1.5.1

h3 3.7.6

idna 3.4

importlib-metadata 6.8.0

importlib-resources 6.1.0

iniconfig 2.0.0

ipykernel 6.25.2

ipympl 0.9.3

ipython 8.16.0

ipython-genutils 0.2.0

ipywidgets 7.8.1

isoduration 20.11.0

jedi 0.19.0

Jinja2 3.1.2

joblib 1.3.2

json5 0.9.14

jsonpointer 2.4

jsonschema 4.19.1

jsonschema-specifications 2023.7.1

jupyter-client 8.3.1

jupyter-core 5.3.2

jupyter-events 0.7.0

jupyter-lsp 2.2.0

jupyter-server 2.7.3

jupyter-server-terminals 0.4.4

jupyterlab 4.0.6

jupyterlab-pygments 0.2.2

jupyterlab-server 2.25.0

jupyterlab-widgets 1.1.7

kiwisolver 1.4.5

loky 3.4.1

MarkupSafe 2.1.3

matplotlib 3.8.0

matplotlib-inline 0.1.6

memoization 0.4.0

mistune 3.0.2

mypy 1.5.1

mypy-extensions 1.0.0

nbclient 0.7.4

nbconvert 7.8.0

nbformat 5.9.2

nest-asyncio 1.5.8

notebook 7.0.4

notebook-shim 0.2.3

numpy 1.26.0

numpy-stubs 0.0.1

overrides 7.4.0

packaging 23.2

pandas 2.1.1

pandocfilters 1.5.0

parso 0.8.3

pexpect 4.8.0

pickleshare 0.7.5

Pillow 10.0.1

platformdirs 3.10.0

pluggy 1.3.0

prometheus-client 0.17.1

prompt-toolkit 3.0.39

psutil 5.9.5

ptyprocess 0.7.0

pure-eval 0.2.2

py 1.11.0

pycparser 2.21

Pygments 2.16.1

pyinstrument 4.6.1

pyparsing 3.1.1

pytest 7.4.2

pytest-mypy 0.10.3

pytest-tornasync 0.6.0.post2

python-dateutil 2.8.2

python-json-logger 2.0.7

pytz 2023.3.post1

PyYAML 6.0.1

pyzmq 25.1.1

referencing 0.30.2

requests 2.31.0

retry 0.9.2

rfc3339-validator 0.1.4

rfc3986-validator 0.1.1

rpds-py 0.10.3

scikit-learn 1.3.1

scipy 1.11.3

Send2Trash 1.8.2

six 1.16.0

sniffio 1.3.0

soupsieve 2.5

stack-data 0.6.3

terminado 0.17.1

threadpoolctl 3.2.0

timezonefinder 6.2.0

tinycss2 1.2.1

tomli 2.0.1

tornado 6.3.3

traitlets 5.10.1

types-dataclasses 0.6.6

types-python-dateutil 2.8.19.14

types-retry 0.9.9.4

typing-extensions 4.8.0

tzdata 2023.3

uri-template 1.3.0

urllib3 2.0.5

voila 0.5.4

wcwidth 0.2.8

webcolors 1.13

webencodings 0.5.1

websocket-client 1.6.3

websockets 11.0.3

widgetsnbextension 3.6.6

zipp 3.17.0

Front-end (JavaScript) Dependencies

jQuery 3.5.1

jQuery Colorbox

ScrollMagic

Twitter Bootstrap 4.5.3

d3.js

Other references

Arve

  • Endpoint: https://www.arveair.com/terms-and-conditions/

Rest Countries

WHO COVID-19 Global Data

  • Endpoint: https://covid19.who.int/WHO-COVID-19-global-data.csv

ArcGIS Geocode

  • Endpoint: https://geocode.arcgis.com

View Hub Resources

  • Endpoint: https://view-hub.org/resources

CERN Web Analytics

  • Endpoint: https://webanalytics.web.cern.ch/

Zenodo Badge

  • Endpoint: https://zenodo.org/badge/DOI/10.5281/zenodo.6520431.svg
  • Description: Zenodo itself does not impose any specific license on the content that is deposited. Instead, it allows the depositor to choose the license for their content. This means that the permissiveness of the Zenodo badge (with the DOI) depends entirely on the license chosen by the person depositing the content.

Swiss COVID-19 Data

  • Endpoint: https://www.covid19.admin.ch/en/epidemiologic/case/d/development?epiRelDev=abs

License Distribution

License Distribution

License information

The list of open-source dependencies provided here includes licenses for both direct dependencies and dependencies of dependencies. This comprehensive list covers a wide range of licenses, each with its own terms and conditions. Below is a summary of the most frequently encountered licenses along with their descriptions and usage:

  1. MIT License

    • Description: The MIT License is a permissive free software license originating at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). It is a short and simple license that allows developers to use, modify, and distribute the software for both commercial and non-commercial purposes.
  2. Apache License, Version 2.0

    • Description: The Apache License, Version 2.0 is a widely used open-source software license that allows users to use the software for any purpose, to distribute it, to modify it, and to distribute modified versions of the software under the terms of the license.
  3. Berkeley Software Distribution License (BSDL)

    • Description: The BSD License is a family of permissive free software licenses that allow users to do anything they want with the source code, as long as they include the original copyright and license notice in any copy of the code or substantial portion of it.
  4. Mozilla Public License 2.0 (MPL)

    • Description: The Mozilla Public License is a free and open-source software license developed and maintained by the Mozilla Foundation. It is a copyleft license, which means that derived works can only be distributed under the same license terms.
  5. Python Software Foundation Licene (PSFL)

    • Description: The Python Software Foundation License (PSFL) is a BSD-style, permissive software license which is compatible with the GNU General Public License (GPL).[1] Its primary use is for distribution of the Python project software and its documentation. Since the license is permissive, it allows proprietization of the derivations.
  6. Internet Systems Consourtium License (ISCL)

    • Description: The ISC license is a permissive free software license published by the Internet Software Consortium, now called Internet Systems Consortium (ISC). It is functionally equivalent to the simplified BSD and MIT licenses.
  7. Historical Permission Notice and Disclaimer License (HPND)

    • Description: The Historical Permission Notice and Disclaimer (HPND) is an open source license, approved by the Open Source Initiative (OSI) and verified as GPL-compatible by the Free Software Foundation. The license can be almost functionally identical to the new, 3-clause BSD License (if the option for the no-promotion clause is exercised), or the MIT License (if the option for the no-promotion clause is not exercised).