Based on our record, Free Music Archive seems to be a lot more popular than MIT License. While we know about 44 links to Free Music Archive, we've tracked only 4 mentions of MIT License. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Question: Why do you choose LGPL-3.0? For many, of the most attractive features of SQLite is its license (or should I say lack thereof). I realise some people view public domain as legally problematic. I think the best answer for that is public-domain equivalent licenses such as 0BSD [0] or MIT-0 [1] – technically still copyrighted, but effectively not. (There are other, possibly more well-known options such as... - Source: Hacker News / 3 months ago
There's also another OSI approved "zero" license called MIT-0 https://opensource.org/license/mit-0/. - Source: Hacker News / 4 months ago
Probably a MIT-0 header will make people less worried to use the code. Take a look at https://opensource.org/license/mit-0/ https://github.com/aws/mit-0. - Source: Hacker News / 5 months ago
There's even a variant of the license called 'MIT No Attribution License' that has this specific clause removed (just in case you aren't convinced that the clause does cover attribution): https://github.com/aws/mit-0. Source: 11 months ago
Free Music Archive - Music for video, podcasts, etc licensed under Creative Commons. - Source: dev.to / 3 months ago
Put it on sites where you can get free music (usually CC-BY licensed) - like https://freemusicarchive.org and several others. Source: 9 months ago
Check out the free music archive. https://freemusicarchive.org/ Just follow the terms of the license for the song you’re looking to use. Source: 10 months ago
Free Music Archive has royalty free Creative Commons music. Tons of it, though you have to check the licenses carefully. A lot of them are for non-commercial projects only, so if you ever plan to sell an ad or otherwise make money on your show, don't use those. Still a lot to choose from, though, at least the last time I used it a couple years ago, the discovery tools weren't great. https://freemusicarchive.org/. Source: 11 months ago
I've used https://freemusicarchive.org/ before. Should show the copyright info for each song. Source: about 1 year ago
Simplified BSD License - Also known as the "2-clause" BSD license, this is a simplified version of an open source license created at the University of California Berkley.
AudioJungle - Discover 637399 Royalty Free Music tracks and audio files from only $1 on AudioJungle. Buy Royalty Free Music from a Global Community of Musicians and Sound Engineers.
AGPL - GNU Affero General Public License. Strong license for applications designed to guarentee user freedoms to access, modify, and redistribute server-side code.
Premiumbeat - Premiumbeat.com provides high quality Royalty Free Music.
GPLv2 - Created for the GNU project, the GNU General Public License version 2 is the most popular free software license.
Incompetech - Royalty Free and Creative Commons Music Archive