| All of the code and documentation in SQLite has been dedicated to the public |
| domain by the authors. All code authors, and representatives of the companies |
| they work for, have signed affidavits dedicating their contributions to the |
| public domain and originals of those signed affidavits are stored in a firesafe |
| at the main offices of Hwaci. Anyone is free to copy, modify, publish, use, |
| compile, sell, or distribute the original SQLite code, either in source code |
| form or as a compiled binary, for any purpose, commercial or non-commercial, |
| and by any means. |
| |
| The previous paragraph applies to the deliverable code and documentation in |
| SQLite - those parts of the SQLite library that you actually bundle and ship |
| with a larger application. Some scripts used as part of the build process (for |
| example the "configure" scripts generated by autoconf) might fall under other |
| open-source licenses. Nothing from these build scripts ever reaches the final |
| deliverable SQLite library, however, and so the licenses associated with those |
| scripts should not be a factor in assessing your rights to copy and use the |
| SQLite library. |
| |
| All of the deliverable code in SQLite has been written from scratch. No code has |
| been taken from other projects or from the open internet. Every line of code can |
| be traced back to its original author, and all of those authors have public |
| domain dedications on file. So the SQLite code base is clean and is |
| uncontaminated with licensed code from other projects. |
| |
| Source: https://www.sqlite.org/copyright.html |