MIT-Licensed HTML App Builder
MIT-licensed, no strings, no royalties, no clauses that reach back into your work. Fork it, brand it, resell it.
Licences are the fine print of freedom. GPL is copyleft — what you build with it must stay open. Proprietary "free tiers" are hallways with paywalls. MIT is the shortest, plainest permission slip in the industry: use it, change it, sell it, keep the copyright notice in the source. That's it. The App Factory is MIT-licensed on purpose, so builders can commercialise their work without asking us anything.
What MIT permits
Commercial use, modification, distribution, sublicensing, private use. You can build a product on top of the Factory, sell it, and never share your source. You can rebrand the Factory itself if that's your line of work. Nothing here is viral.
What MIT requires
Preserve the copyright notice and the licence text in the source of anything derived from it. That's the whole obligation. The Factory ships those notices tucked inside the file where nobody but you will ever look.
Why we chose it
Because we'd rather people build than ask permission. Copyleft is right for some projects; for a workshop meant to help you make things you sell, permissive licensing is the honest match.
Frequently asked
Can I sell apps I build with the Factory?
Yes. Commercial use is explicitly permitted.
Can I fork the Factory itself and sell that?
Yes. Keep the copyright and licence text somewhere in the source.
Do I owe royalties?
No. MIT is royalty-free forever.
Where is the licence text?
Inside the download, in the source of the HTML file, and in the README that ships with the .zip.
One HTML file · MIT-licensed · works offline · nothing to install.