The contents of this distribution are "essentially in the public domain". The scare quotes there are intentional. For a more precise description, continue reading. John Colagioia's original license text can be found in `doc/license.txt`. (In it, the phrase "this file" referred to the archive in which all the Thue files were distributed.) He placed the files he wrote (implementation, spec, and examples) into the public domain *except* with the proviso that he be contacted by anyone who wanted to do "anything interesting" with the files, including modifying them. Unfortunately, the email address he left for this purpose, with the claim that it would be kept current, is no longer active. Thus, one can probably reasonably assume that he is no longer interested in what happens to his Thue sources, and that they are unconditionally in the public domain; however, I am not a lawyer, etc. etc. Frédéric van der Plancke's implementation, and example source, are much less questionably in the public domain; his only proviso is that he be given credit for what he wrote (and not be given credit for any changes or additions that he did not write.) Actually, as I understand it (but again, I am not a lawyer etc etc), putting something into the public domain does not take away one's moral rights to be recognized as author and to not be miscredited, so this isn't very much (if at all) different from just being in the public domain. I, Chris Pressey, hereby place my implementation in Ruby, my example Thue programs in `eg`, and the contents of the README, into the public domain, under the Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication, the details of which can be found here: http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ The following example files were taken from the esolangs.org wiki, and are thus also under the CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication: truth-machine.t