@copying
: Declare Copying Permissions
The @copying
command should be given very early in the document;
the recommended location is right after the header material
(see Texinfo File Header). It conventionally consists of a sentence
or two about what the program is, identification of the documentation
itself, the legal copyright line, and the copying permissions. Here is
a skeletal example:
@copying This manual is for program (version version, updated date), which ... Copyright @copyright{} years copyright-owner. @quotation Permission is granted to ... @end quotation @end copying
The @quotation
has no legal significance; it's there to improve
readability in some contexts.
See GNU Sample Texts, for the full text to be used in GNU manuals. See GNU Free Documentation License, for the license itself under which GNU and other free manuals are distributed. You need to include the license as an appendix to your document.
The text of @copying
is output as a comment at the beginning of
Info, HTML, and XML output files. It is not output implicitly in
plain text or TeX; it's up to you to use @insertcopying
to
emit the copying information. See the next section for details.
The @copyright{}
command generates a c
inside a circle
in output formats that support this (print and HTML). In the other
formats (Info and plain text), it generates (C)
. The copyright
notice itself has the following legally defined sequence:
Copyright © years copyright-owner.
The word `Copyright' must always be written in English, even if the document is otherwise written in another language. This is due to international law.
The list of years should include all years in which a version was completed (even if it was released in a subsequent year). Ranges are not allowed; each year must be written out individually and in full, separated by commas.
The copyright owner (or owners) is whoever holds legal copyright on the work. In the case of works assigned to the FSF, the owner is `Free Software Foundation, Inc.'.
The copyright `line' may actually be split across multiple lines, both in the source document and in the output. This often happens for documents with a long history, having many different years of publication.
See Copyright Notices, for additional information.