This repository hosts the Individual Contributor License Agreement (ICLA) that contributors to projects under the SantanderAI organization must accept before their contributions can be merged.
CLA.md- The full text of the Individual Contributor License Agreement.
We use the CLA Assistant Lite workflow. When you open your first pull request to a participating SantanderAI project, a bot will post a comment asking you to read CLA.md and reply with:
I have read the CLA Document and I hereby sign the CLA
Once you reply, your signature is recorded inside the same project repository under .cla-signatures/v1/cla.json. You will be asked to sign once per project; signatures are not consolidated across the organization at this time.
The CLA ensures that:
- You own the contribution (or are authorized to submit it on behalf of an employer).
- You grant SantanderAI a perpetual, worldwide, royalty-free licence to use, modify and redistribute your contribution under the project's open-source licence (Apache 2.0).
- Patent claims that may cover your contribution are licensed under the same terms.
- No future surprises: the project can continue to be relicensed or used in derivative works without revisiting individual contributors.
The CLA does not change the open-source nature of the project. Your code remains under Apache 2.0; you retain copyright and the right to use your own contributions anywhere else.
This CLA is based on the widely-used Apache Individual Contributor License Agreement (ICLA) v2.2, which is the de facto standard adopted by Apache Foundation, Linux Foundation projects, Google, Microsoft and Meta.
Signatures contain only the public information already exposed by your GitHub profile (username, numeric ID) plus the timestamp of acceptance and the PR number where it was given. No additional personal data is collected. For GDPR erasure requests email privacy@gruposantander.com.
Open an issue in this repository, or email opensource@gruposantander.com.
The text in this repository is published under Creative Commons Zero (CC0 1.0 Universal) - the documents themselves are dedicated to the public domain so they can be reused freely.