
Hi Luke,
As it is currently I am the sole author of every file, so that should be clear enough.
Clear enough for those of us who are watching, but 5 years from now people will wind up using Boost.Polygon without ever relating it to you. So, I strongly recommend that you find a legal way to put your name in the code *and* the documentation, alongside Intel of course. FWIW, what I've always seen is: the copyright holder being the sponsoring or employing company, but the "author" being the person who was sponsored or employed. Something like: Copyright (C) 2009, Intel Corp. Author: Lucanus Simonson (<your email here>) IANAL but that makes legal sense because an "author" isn't implicitely bound to any sort of right, so they all go to Intel as they require. This is in the very spirit of open source where your name in the material is your most dirtect, often only, retribution. Best -- Fernando Cacciola SciSoft Consulting, Founder http://www.scisoft-consulting.com