The
Netscape Public License (NPL) is a
free software license, the license under which
Netscape Communications Corporation originally released
Mozilla.
Its most notable feature is that it gives the original developer of Mozilla (
Netscape, now a subsidiary of
Time Warner), the right to distribute modifications made by other contributors under whatever terms it desires, including
proprietary terms, without granting similar rights to these other contributors in respect to contributions made by the original developer. This allowed the release of the
Netscape 6 and later versions as proprietary software.
This asymmetry with respect to rights has led to criticism of the license by many members of the
open source and
free software movements: the
Free Software Foundation as a free-software license
but one to be avoided, and the
Open Source Initiative entirely. The FSF adds that it's not possible to combine software obtained under the license with software obtained under the
GPL.
The
Mozilla Public License is similar, but lacks the asymmetry in rights. Time Warner, exercising its rights under the Netscape Public License, and at the request of the Mozilla Foundation, has all code in Mozilla that was under the Netscape Public License (including code by other contributors) to an MPL/GPL/
LGPL triple license, thus removing the GPL-incompatibility.