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Licenses

From Definition of Free Cultural Works
Revision as of 17:14, 21 May 2006 by Antoine (talk | contribs) (→‎The grid: related rights + anti-DRM)
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The grid

License Intended scope Copyleft Practical modifiability Attribution Related rights Anti-DRM Worldwide applicability
Against DRM artworks yes no no granted (+copyleft) yes exact translations
CC BY - no no yes granted yes national adaptations
CC BY-SA - yes no yes granted yes national adaptations
Design Science - yes yes no no no same license (English version)
Free Art License - yes no yes granted no exact translations (french law)
GNU FDL text documents yes yes no no no same license (English version)
GNU GPL software yes yes no no no same license (English version)

Criteria for choosing a license

We explain hereafter some of the criteria which may influence your choice of a free content license. Those criteria are not inherently good or bad. The importance of each criteria depends on the context (for example the kind of work, or the kind of collaborative process you want to encourage), and on personal preferences.

This list is not meant to be exhaustive. Other aspects may be important, like the clarity of the wording of a license, or the philosophy which is defended by its authors, or whether the license is surrounded by an active community of authors.

Endly, we want to stress that, before choosing a license, you must read the license text carefully. No summary, no matter how attractive or reassuring, can replace detailed understanding of the license itself.

Intended scope

Some licenses strive to be as generic as is humanly (or rather, legally) possible. Others deliberately focus on a specific domain of creation, like software, or documentation. When a license has such a focus, it doesn't mean that it cannot be used for other kinds of works, but that its main area of use (and thus its social recognition as a trustable license) is clearly bounded.

For example, the GNU GPL can be used for many kinds of works, but its main area of recognition is software.

Copyleft

When a work is "copylefted", it means all derived works (even if they mix in other works as well) must be distributed under the same terms (usually the same exact license) as the original work. Conversely, a non-copylefted work can be distributed under different terms, and even be rendered non-free.

Therefore, using a copyleft license pretty much guarantees that users of subsequent works (for example modified copies) will be granted the same essential freedoms. On the other hand, a copyleft license can also limit opportunities for re-use, because most copyleft licenses are not compatible between each other. This is why people sometimes prefer non-copyleft license, depending on the work and the kind of practices they want to encourage.

ShareAlike is a synonym of copyleft in the Creative Commons vocabulary.

Practical modifiability

Although all free licenses give you the legal right to modify, not all of them try to specify how modifiability of the work is practically enforced. Requiring modifiability is important, especially for works which can be distributed under a completely opaque format such as software binary code ("object code").

The licenses which require practical modifiability usually define a notion of source code, source data or similar.

Attribution

Requiring attribution means that authorship for the work must be recognized in any circumstances. In the context of derived works (modified copies), this includes the initial as well as subsequent authors and contributors.

It may be argued that all licenses implicitly require attribution, as they mandate that the copyright notice must be kept intact when distributing copies. However, the copyright notice may not acknowledge authorship for all contributors (past and present), especially if the legal copyright holder is an organization.

Attribution is a double-edged sword, as it may become a very heavy burden to list all contributors for projects implying seamless and massive collaboration (like Wikipedia). For most works it is a however a reasonable requirement.

Related rights

Some licenses treat future related rights too (the rights that belong to the performers, the producers of phonograms and broadcasting organizations in relation to their performances, phonograms and broadcasts respectively). If related rights aren't expressly free, related rights are reserved. For example, if a phonogram-maker produces a CD with songs released under Against DRM, you can copy and distribute the CD, you can grab CD and share mp3 (this is actually possible only with Against DRM, because in this license also future relate rights of third parties are copylefted).

Anti-DRM

Some licenses contain an anti-DRM clause. In some licenses this clause concerns only the licensee (licensor can use DRM systems to forbid not granted rights).

Worldwide applicability

When distributing a free work over the world, it is important to understand how people from other countries will be able to reuse this work.

License writers have adopted three different strategies regarding the internationalization of their licenses:

  • same license for everyone: only the original license text (often in English) is given legal value, and translations may be provided purely for information purposes;
  • exact translations: translations of the original license text are provided, which all have legal value; those translations have exactly the same clauses and wording as the original text;
  • local adaptations: the license is rewritten according to each national legal system.

Attention: some licenses use a specific national law: so you cannot interpret the license through your national law, but through the law specified in the license. For example, Free Art License use french law (you must pay attention to french law also if the license is writed in english, german or other languages).

The two first schemes ensure that everyone is given the same rights. In the third scheme (local adaptations), similarity and equivalence of the different versions should be carefully examined.

According to advocates of the adaptation scheme, licenses must be rewritten in order to cope with the peculiarities of the various legal systems. This position is held by the Creative Commons organization.

According to opponents of the adaptation scheme, having different national versions of a license presents the risk to break trust and interoperability. Also, they stress that the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works provides a framework which, with careful drafting, allows to write internationally applicable license texts. This position is held by the Free Software Foundation and by the Free Art License authors.

License list

Against DRM

Creative Commons licenses

Creative Commons BY

  • complete name: Creative Commons Attribution
  • current version: 2.5

Creative Commons BY-SA

  • complete name: Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike
  • current version: 2.5

Design Science License

Free Art License

GNU FDL

Invariant sections

Invariant sections are a special provision of the GFDL which, if used, prevent anyone from modifying the parts of the work which are defined as "invariant". The Free Software Foundation finds it useful to protect some special "non-functional" parts of the work, like a statement of intent (the motivation for invariant sections was, allegedly, to prevent the GNU Manifesto to be removed or modified in GNU documentations).

We believe, however, that freedom should apply to all kind of works, and that what is "functional" in one situation can be "artistic" in another - and vice-versa. Consequently, a work using invariant sections to forbid some kinds of modifications to the work cannot not be considered completely free.

GNU GPL





Current draft

(to be removed when the page overhaul is finished)

Tentatively, the following licenses are known to meet the criteria set out by the definition:

In addition, works in the public domain are also free content as per the definition.

To be verified:

Controversial:

  • IANG license - seeks to enforce lots of things that are outside of the copyright realm (like organization scheme, right of developers to have a voice in the development process, etc.)