Difference between revisions of "CC0"

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'''CC0''' is the "no rights reserved" in Creative Commons licensing - it effectively means releasing your work as [[public domain]].
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'''CC0''' is the "no copyright reserved" option in the Creative Commons toolkit  - it effectively means relinquishing all copyright and similar rights that you hold in a work and dedicating those rights to the [[public domain]].
  
CC0 is a single purpose tool, designed to take on the dedication function of the former [[Public Domain Dedication and Certification]].
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CC0 is a single purpose tool, designed to take on the dedication function of the former, deprecated [[Public Domain Dedication and Certification]].
  
How effectively this works may depend on your legal regime, but the tool is intended to effectively release rights even in legal contexts where this is difficult.
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How effectively CC0 works will depend on the legal regime in which the work is used, but the tool is intended to effectively release rights even in jurisdictions where it is difficult to do so.
  
Note that CC0 is a three-tier instrument.  We recognize that a waiver may not be effective in most jurisdictions, and CC0's enforceability is not solely dependent on the waiver[http://www.teamlaw.com .]  The fall back public license is similar to our Attribution-only license with the attribution requirement waived.  The BY license is enforceable around the world -- this public license tier is in some ways the core of CC0. The third and final tier is a non assertion by the copyright holder that even if the waiver and license do not operate as intended, the copyright holder will not take any actions that prevents a user of the work from exercising rights consistent with the intention of the copyright holder.   
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Note that CC0 is a three-tier instrument.  We recognize that a waiver may not be effective in some jurisdictionsCC0's enforceability is not solely dependent on the waiver. The fall back public license -- the second tier -- is similar to our Attribution-only license but without the attribution requirement. The third tier is a non-assertion by the copyright holder that even if the waiver and license do not operate as intended, the copyright holder will not take any actions that prevent a user of the work from exercising rights consistent with the intention of the copyright holder as expressed in CC0.   
  
For detailed information see [[CC0 FAQ]].
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For detailed information, see the [[CC0 FAQ]].
  
{{Translations
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==CC0 Translations==
| articles = Pt:CC0, Ksh:CC0, Fr:CC0, De:CC0
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Translations of CC0 may be conducted according to the [[Legal Code Translation Policy]].
}}
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See the [https://wiki.creativecommons.org/wiki/Legal_Tools_Translation#Translation_status_of_the_4.0_licenses_and_of_CC0 CC0 translations completed or in progress].
  
 
[[Category:License]]
 
[[Category:License]]
 
[[Category:CC0]]
 
[[Category:CC0]]

Latest revision as of 08:22, 28 November 2016

CC0 is the "no copyright reserved" option in the Creative Commons toolkit - it effectively means relinquishing all copyright and similar rights that you hold in a work and dedicating those rights to the public domain.

CC0 is a single purpose tool, designed to take on the dedication function of the former, deprecated Public Domain Dedication and Certification.

How effectively CC0 works will depend on the legal regime in which the work is used, but the tool is intended to effectively release rights even in jurisdictions where it is difficult to do so.

Note that CC0 is a three-tier instrument. We recognize that a waiver may not be effective in some jurisdictions. CC0's enforceability is not solely dependent on the waiver. The fall back public license -- the second tier -- is similar to our Attribution-only license but without the attribution requirement. The third tier is a non-assertion by the copyright holder that even if the waiver and license do not operate as intended, the copyright holder will not take any actions that prevent a user of the work from exercising rights consistent with the intention of the copyright holder as expressed in CC0.

For detailed information, see the CC0 FAQ.

CC0 Translations

Translations of CC0 may be conducted according to the Legal Code Translation Policy.

See the CC0 translations completed or in progress.