Wikimedia Blog/Drafts/Using Licenses in an easy (and legal) way
This was a draft for a blog post that has since been published at https://blog.wikimedia.org/2014/12/09/using-licenses-easy-and-legal/
Title ideas[edit]
- Using Licenses in an easy (and legal) way
- New Guide on Open Content licenses published in English
Body[edit]
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/08/Open_Content_A_Practical_Guide_to_Using_Creative_Commons_Licences_web-1.png/200px-Open_Content_A_Practical_Guide_to_Using_Creative_Commons_Licences_web-1.png)
Picture: Benh LIEU SONG, „Cappadocia Balloon Inflating Wikimedia Commons“, Design: Markus Büsges, leomaria designbüro, Germany, „Open Content A Practical Guide to Using Creative Commons Licences“, CC BY-SA 4.0
Over the past ten years, different free license models have been developed to make this situation more user-friendly. They suggest that not “all” but rather “some” rights should be reserved to the originator, giving reusers the opportunity to use, share, combine and spread content without working out agreements with the authors beforehand. Free licenses, e.g. the ones by Creative Commons, grant or exclude different kinds of reusage in the form of standardized license agreements. Within the scope of these licenses users can share copyrighted material as they please.
By using free licenses instead of traditional copyright, users can reach a far wider audience with their works. In times when people first look for information online, this is how it becomes possible to e.g. run the biggest online encyclopedia consisting of copyrighted texts and pictures in a legal way.
Free licenses are an important tool to make knowledge available to all people but not everyone knows how exactly they are to be used. At the conference “Shaping Access”, new guidelines have been presented that approach this topic in a descriptive and comprehensible way.
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/2e/Open_Content_A_Practical_Guide_to_Using_Creative_Commons_Licences_web-10.png/300px-Open_Content_A_Practical_Guide_to_Using_Creative_Commons_Licences_web-10.png)
The guide extensively deals with all six license modules of the Creative Commons licenses, the ensuing opportunities as well as questions. The license “Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike,” e.g., allows adaptations of the respective content but it is not always clear what exactly an adaptation is. And how does the license deal with adaptations in the form of remixes or mashups? Kreutzer also talks about what it means to make a piece of work available “publicly” or “privately.” In addition, there is a section about trademarks and moral rights and their relationship to free licenses.
The “NonCommercial” license module also leaves a wide margin for interpretation. It doesn’t follow from the license agreement what exactly has to be understood as “non-commercial” usage.[2] Is it for example commercial or non-commercial when a publicly financed institution incorporates content on their website? This was the subject of a recent legal case in Germany where the Higher Regional Court of North Rhine-Westfalia ruled that the publicly funded Deutschlandradio acted within its rights when it included a picture on its website that was only to be used in non-commercial contexts. The court declared that as an entity of the public sector, Deutschlandradio is inherently not profit-oriented.
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/79/Open_Content_A_Practical_Guide_to_Using_Creative_Commons_Licences_web-26.png/300px-Open_Content_A_Practical_Guide_to_Using_Creative_Commons_Licences_web-26.png)
“Open Content - A Practical Guide to Using Creative Commons Licences” is available as full text on Meta-Wiki and PDF. The text itself is licensed under CC-BY. We encourage you to adapt it, to translate it into your language and to share it with the whole Wikimedia movement and beyond. If you have any comment, you can get back to me via katja.ullrich@wikimedia.de or leave a comment on the talk page on Meta. Please feel free to share any new versions of the guide you may create over time with me.
- ↑ https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=All_rights_reserved&oldid=614754821
- ↑ The brochure “Free Knowledge thanks to Creative Commons licenses - Why a non-commercial clause often won’t serve your needs” published by iRights, Creative Commons and Wikimedia Deutschland actually deals with this topic in a very accessible manner.
Katja Ullrich, project manager at Wikimedia Deutschland
Notes[edit]
Ideas for social media messages promoting the published post:
Twitter (@wikimedia):
Want to use @creativecommons licenses and don't know how? Check out the new guidelines published by @WikimediaDE. (link to blogpost)
Facebook/Google+
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