@sf-interns/owners Currently, all the code is publicly available on GitHub. If we plan to make it publicly available, we should pick an appropriate open source license. If not, we need to consider making the repository private or perhaps have an explicit license that indicates all rights are reserved. For the latter, I'm not sure how that would work in legal terms seeing as the source is still publicly available.
@sf-interns/owners Currently, all the code is publicly available on GitHub. If we plan to make it publicly available, we should pick an appropriate open source license. If not, we need to consider making the repository private or perhaps have an explicit license that indicates all rights are reserved. For the latter, I'm not sure how that would work in legal terms seeing as the source is still publicly available.