Share Alike

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SA, aka Share Alike.

The Share Alike aspect requires all derivatives of a work to be licensed under the same (or a compatible) license as the original. Thus, if a person were to use parts of a BY-SA movie to create a new short film that new short film would also need to be licensed as BY-SA. The advantage of this license is that future users are not able to add new restrictions to a derivative of your work; their derivatives must be licensed the same way. This is in contrast to the Attribution-only license from CC where a derivative could be released under full copyright restrictions (All Rights Reserved).

As changes have been made to the Creative Commons licenses over the years there have been 4 versions of the BY-SA and BY-NC-SA licenses (1.0, 2.0, 2.5, and 3.0[1]). Creative Commons has taken steps to ensure that works licensed under one particular version of the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license can be incorporated with a work from a later version. Specifically, any work that is licensed with a BY-SA or BY-NC-SA version 2.0 or higher can be used with any later version of the license. For specifics see the chart below.

  A Derivative can use the corresponding license version:
If the original work was: 1.0 2.0 2.5 3.0 [1]
BY-SA version 1.0        
BY-NC-SA version 1.0        
BY-SA version 2.0        
BY-NC-SA version 2.0        
BY-SA version 2.5        
BY-NC-SA version 2.5        
BY-SA version 3.0 [1]        
BY-NC-SA version 3.0 [1]        
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 The 3.0 licenses added a compatibility clause. Creative Commons may declare a license compatible with ShareAlike, allowing it to be used instead of the exact same license for derivatives.