> Is the use of a compatible licence a "re-licensing"?
> No. The original code will stay covered by the EUPL. It is the combined work only that could be, when needed, covered by the compatible licence. In this framework, a combined work results from merging functional codes covered by two (or more) different licenses. The simple action of "linking" does not merge functional codes and in such case the various linked parts will keep their primary licences. This is resulting from the European law, since Directive 2009/24/EC states that interfaces (APIs, data structures etc.) needed for making two programs interoperable can be freely reproduced/used in the various source codes, as an exception to strict copyright rules.
> To be legitimate, the use of the compatibility clause must result from necessity: using it for the sole purpose of relicensing a copy of the original work would be a copyright infringement.
> Is the use of a compatible licence a "re-licensing"?
> No. The original code will stay covered by the EUPL. It is the combined work only that could be, when needed, covered by the compatible licence. In this framework, a combined work results from merging functional codes covered by two (or more) different licenses. The simple action of "linking" does not merge functional codes and in such case the various linked parts will keep their primary licences. This is resulting from the European law, since Directive 2009/24/EC states that interfaces (APIs, data structures etc.) needed for making two programs interoperable can be freely reproduced/used in the various source codes, as an exception to strict copyright rules.
> To be legitimate, the use of the compatibility clause must result from necessity: using it for the sole purpose of relicensing a copy of the original work would be a copyright infringement.