I originally wrote a few nonsequitor sentences here then realized I'm not in any state to think about legal messes. Let's discuss options further via PM if you want to include the driver in any of your work. In the mean time, I suggest playing with it to see if it actually fits your needs.
I'll PM you, and see if you want to backtrack on the WTFPL license ... which is, of course, exactly
why it is important to bring this stuff up in
any development that uses "free" software!
I do somewhat miss when I started development work in the early 2000s and everything was like this.
The Boost License and the Zlib License are the grown-up versions of the WTFPL license ... they basically add the protection that anyone using the source not sue the author ... kind of important in a world where you can get sued for serving a cup of coffee that's "too hot".
Stuff like Magic Kit doesn't even have mention of a license. Whatever.
Simpler times, I'm afraid.
I don't think that I was ever asked to put a copyright notice in my early games' source. It was all proprietary tech where nobody else ever saw the source.
GNU/FSF changed the world, first by creating the idea of "open-source" that anyone could use ... then by creating a legal framework in which it's openness could be
protected ... and then by suing companies that just took the source without complying with the license.
It doesn't mean that theirs is the only way ... lots of alternatives have emerged because people found GNU/FSF to be
too dogmatic and restrictive.
But they did make everyone pay attention to the legalities, and not just "assume".
I can't say that I'm happy with all the changes in the world over my lifetime ... but I have to live with those changes, whatever my personal feelings are.
I like to release my stuff under a very permissive license ... but some people can't stand that someone out there might ever make any money when using their stuff, and so want to use something like the GPL or LGPL.
If you look around at open source projects that real companies pay people to work on ... there's a lot less GPL/LGPL these days, and a rise in less restrictive Mozilla or Apache use.