From 62ef193c4f69db09b9e677031903da00930fd4ac Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "Bradley M. Kuhn" Date: Sat, 26 Jul 2025 14:26:00 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] =?UTF-8?q?Fix=20typos=20in=20summary=20adjudication=20def?= =?UTF-8?q?inition;=20return=20=E2=80=9Cfull=E2=80=9D?= MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit I just realized that we probably had “full” there for cases where we shorten the definition on the front page. I just did that here, so returned the word full. --- .../content/copyleft-compliance/glossary.html | 4 ++-- conservancy/templates/frontpage.html | 13 +++++-------- 2 files changed, 7 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-) diff --git a/conservancy/content/copyleft-compliance/glossary.html b/conservancy/content/copyleft-compliance/glossary.html index ba6dd13f..21b87dce 100644 --- a/conservancy/content/copyleft-compliance/glossary.html +++ b/conservancy/content/copyleft-compliance/glossary.html @@ -98,11 +98,11 @@ requests for remedy for the matter.

In a summary judgment motion, a party in a lawsuit asks the Court to rule immediately on some (or all) of the claims made in the complaint. A motion for summary judgment on -just some issues is called “partial” —. To rule +just some issues is called “partial”. To rule affirmatively for summary judgment, the Judge must determine there are no issues of fact in dispute on the issue(s) in question. The Judge rules as a matter of law on the issue. In some state courts — -including California — these motions are called “motion for +including California — these are called “motions for summary adjudication”.

diff --git a/conservancy/templates/frontpage.html b/conservancy/templates/frontpage.html index c1ff0e19..43e7ed48 100644 --- a/conservancy/templates/frontpage.html +++ b/conservancy/templates/frontpage.html @@ -88,14 +88,11 @@ strategies that defend FOSS (such as copyleft).

In a summary judgment motion, a party in a lawsuit asks the Court to rule immediately on some (or all) of the claims made in the complaint. A motion for summary judgment on -just some issues is called “partial” —. To rule -affirmatively for summary judgment, the Judge must determine there are no -issues of fact in dispute on the issue(s) in question. The Judge -rules as a matter of law on the issue. In some state courts — -including California — these motions are called “motion for -summary adjudication”.

-

Visit - our glossary of terms…

+just some issues is called “partial”. … In California +state court — these are “motions for summary +adjudication”.

+

Visit + full glossary of terms…