Difference between revisions of "Creative Commons"

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|Open or Free Statement=yes
 
|Open or Free Statement=yes
 
|OER Statement=yes
 
|OER Statement=yes
|Hewlett Grantee=yes
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|Link Archive=no
 
|License provider=CC
 
|License provider=CC
 
|License short name=CC BY
 
|License short name=CC BY

Revision as of 17:23, 22 October 2008

License(s)
CC BY
CC
Main URL
http://creativecommons.org
Resource URL Information.png

Unspecified

Resource Feed Information.png

Unspecified


Affiliation
Unspecified
Organization Type
nonprofit
Location
Unspecified
Language
Unspecified
Tags
open licenses,licenses,licensing
Open or Free Statement
yes


Creative Commons is a Massachusetts-chartered 501(c)(3) tax-exempt charitable corporation.

Share, Remix, Reuse — Legally

Creative Commons provides free tools that let authors, scientists, artists, and educators easily mark their creative work with the freedoms they want it to carry. You can use CC to change your copyright terms from "All Rights Reserved" to "Some Rights Reserved."

Too often the debate over creative control tends to the extremes. At one pole is a vision of total control — a world in which every last use of a work is regulated and in which “all rights reserved” (and then some) is the norm. At the other end is a vision of anarchy — a world in which creators enjoy a wide range of freedom but are left vulnerable to exploitation. Balance, compromise, and moderation — once the driving forces of a copyright system that valued innovation and protection equally — have become endangered species.

Creative Commons is working to revive them. We use private rights to create public goods: creative works set free for certain uses. Like the free software and open-source movements, our ends are cooperative and community-minded, but our means are voluntary and libertarian. We work to offer creators a best-of-both-worlds way to protect their works while encouraging certain uses of them — to declare “some rights reserved.”

—Creative Commons