Talk:Jeep Liberty/Electrical/Firewall Penetration

Hi Micheal, thanks for the compliment!

I have no problem with you posting the information, in fact it would be a second location for the information and that can only be helpful. I just wanted to get the information out so that anyone who came after me would not have to search thru all of the posts and other information to find out what they need to do. If you want to go ahead and grab the information as posted on my original page: http://home.comcast.net/~corwyyn/firewall-penetration.html feel free to do so. Please note that this page will most likely disappear at the end of the month so if you want it now is the time! I am going to try valiantly to update the images and make some minor additions, but that may have to wait until after this weekend as my mother will be moving down here to Tempe and I will need to help unpack the truck. As soon as I get everything ready I could always go to the wiki site and do the update so that shouldn't be a problem.

Again, thanks for the offer and the help.

Regards,

_________________ Kevin
 * AD5VG*

Kevin,

I really liked your Firewall Penetration Guide! I found it very informative and useful. I would love to use it in a project I'm involved with called Wikibooks, so I'm seeking your permission.

Wikibooks http://wikibooks.org is a collection of free non-fiction books (only textbooks so far) that is collaboratively-edited by volunteers from around the world. You might have heard of our sister project, Wikipedia ( http://wikipedia.org ), which is a very large online encyclopedia that, in less than four years time, amassed over 400,000 articles - just in the English language version. However, the Wikibooks project is just starting to write our first textbooks and we hope to duplicate Wikipedia's success in about the same amount of time.

I'd like to include your materials in this Wikibook http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Jeep_Liberty To get a sense of the freedom of Wikibooks, you could even edit this without registration right now.

However, we can only use your materials if you are willing to grant permission for us to use your above referenced work under terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. This means anybody will have the right to share your materials and update them: for example, to keep up with new information. You can read this license in full at: http://wikibooks.org/wiki/GNU_Free_Documentation_License (note: To keep things simple, we don't use Invariant Sections, Front-Cover Texts, or Back-Cover Texts)

The license also expressly protects authors "from being considered responsible for modifications made by others" while ensuring that authors get credit for their work. There is more information on our copyright policy at: http://wikibooks.org/wiki/Wikibooks:Copyrights

If you agree, we will credit you for your work in the resulting Wikibook's author's page. We would also state that your work is being used with your express permission and we will provide a web link back to: http://home.comcast.net/~corwyyn/firewall-penetration.html

Thank you for your time.

Kindly,

Michael Robinson  www.fuzzymuzzle.com