Documentation of the GNU Project
GNU and other free documentation can be obtained by the following methods:
GNU documentation principles
We believe the reader should be free to copy, update, and
redistribute GNU documentation, just like GNU software.
Originally, all our documentation was released under a short
copyleft
license, or
under the
GNU General Public
License (GPL)
. In 2001, the
GNU Free Documentation License
(FDL)
was created to address needs that were not met by licenses
originally designed for software. For more information on free
documentation, please see
Richard
Stallman's
essay, “
Free
Software and Free Manuals.
” A
Texinfo version of that essay
is available
for inclusion in manuals.
Contribute
Please help us write more documentation! This is one of the most
important ways to contribute to the free software movement. For more
details on this and other ways to help,
click here
.
GNU Press:
another way to contribute is to help us
expand
bookstore availability
of
GNU Press
books. For this or any
reason, you can
contact GNU Press
.