Difference between revisions of "4.0/Treatment of adaptations"
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{{4.0 Issue}} | {{4.0 Issue}} | ||
− | '''Summary''' = Four licenses in the CC license suite -- CC BY, CC BY-SA, CC BY-NC, and CC BY-NC-SA -- allow licensees to create adaptations of the licensed work. | + | '''Summary''' = Four licenses in the CC license suite -- CC BY, CC BY-SA, CC BY-NC, and CC BY-NC-SA -- allow licensees to create adaptations of the licensed work. By definition, an adaptation constitutes the new contributions by the person adapting the work and does not extend to the preexisting material.<ref>Article 2(3) of the Berne Convention: “Translations, adaptations, arrangements of music and other alterations of a literary or artistic work shall be protected as original works ''without prejudice to the copyright in the original work.''” (emphasis added) </ref> Accordingly, when an adaptation of a CC-licensed work is created and licensed, the new license only applies to the adapter’s new contributions and not the original content. The original work is licensed to the downstream user directly from the original author. This is because CC licenses do not allow sub-licensing.<ref>See section 8(b) of CC BY: “Each time You Distribute or Publicly Preform an Adaptation, Licensor offers to the recipient a license to the original Work on the same terms and conditions as the license granted to You under this License.”</ref> In other words, when someone uses an adapted work, they are often technically subject to two licenses, one for the adaptation and one for the original work. This nuance raises some complications with respect to the way CC licenses operate. |
== How to license adaptations == | == How to license adaptations == | ||
− | When a licensee creates an adaptation of a CC-licensed work, he is required to release adaptations under the same license if the original work is licensed with a ShareAlike condition. But if the the original is licensed under CC BY or CC BY-NC, there is no express requirement to license adaptations under particular terms and conditions. CC’s [[FAQ]] state that adaptations must be released under a license at least as restrictive as the original, but this obligation is not | + | When a licensee creates an adaptation of a CC-licensed work, he is required to release adaptations under the same license if the original work is licensed with a ShareAlike condition. But if the the original is licensed under CC BY or CC BY-NC, there is no express requirement to license adaptations under particular terms and conditions. CC’s [[FAQ]] state that adaptations must be released under a license at least as restrictive as the original, but this obligation is not explicit in the license. |
Rather, to create an adaptation of a work licensed CC BY, the license says the adapter must attribute the original work, identify that his new work is an adaptation, and include the URI for the license under which the original is released. If the creator of the adaptation complies with these conditions, he may believe he is free to release his adaptation under any license, including CC0, or keep all rights reserved. | Rather, to create an adaptation of a work licensed CC BY, the license says the adapter must attribute the original work, identify that his new work is an adaptation, and include the URI for the license under which the original is released. If the creator of the adaptation complies with these conditions, he may believe he is free to release his adaptation under any license, including CC0, or keep all rights reserved. | ||
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CC’s license text has been criticized on this point for the following reasons: | CC’s license text has been criticized on this point for the following reasons: | ||
− | # Because the license text does not explicitly dictate how adaptations must be licensed in CC BY and CC BY-NC, it is open to an interpretation that allows adaptations to be released under a less restrictive license, which | + | # Because the license text does not explicitly dictate how adaptations must be licensed in CC BY and CC BY-NC, it is open to an interpretation that allows adaptations to be released under a less restrictive license, which may contradict the intentions of licensors. |
# If adaptations are released under a different license than the original, it complicates the license obligations of downstream users as explained in detail below. | # If adaptations are released under a different license than the original, it complicates the license obligations of downstream users as explained in detail below. | ||
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== License obligations of downstream users == | == License obligations of downstream users == | ||
− | As explained above, when someone creates an adaptation of a CC-licensed work and licenses it, the license on the adaptation only covers the adapter’s contributions and does not extend to the original content. To the extent the original work remains distinguishable in the adaptation, the original is licensed to the downstream user directly from the original licensor. In other words, the person using the | + | As explained above, when someone creates an adaptation of a CC-licensed work and licenses it, the license on the adaptation only covers the adapter’s contributions and does not extend to the original content. To the extent the original work remains distinguishable in the adaptation, the original is licensed to the downstream user directly from the original licensor. In other words, the person using the adapted work is the licensee under two separate licenses -- one from the adapter with respect to the new elements (i.e. the adaptation), and one from the original creator with respect to the original. |
This creates a number of complications: | This creates a number of complications: | ||
− | * '''definition of “work”''': because CC licensors are not obligated to identify exactly what “work” they are licensing, users of the | + | * '''definition of “work”''': because CC licensors are not obligated to identify exactly what “work” they are licensing, users of the adapted work may not be able to determine what elements of the literary or artistic work are original to the adapter |
− | * '''attribution stacking''': the user of the | + | * '''attribution stacking''': the user of the adapted work must attribute the licensor of the adaptation and the licensor of the original work to the extent she uses the work in a way that implicates the copyright in both |
− | * '''conflicting obligations''': if the adaptation is licensed under a different license than the original work, the user of the new work may be subject to conflicting license obligations | + | * '''conflicting obligations''': if the adaptation is licensed under a different license than the original work, the user of the new work may be subject to conflicting license obligations when using the adapted work |
=== Proposals for simplifying license compliance in 4.0 === | === Proposals for simplifying license compliance in 4.0 === |
Revision as of 21:03, 28 November 2011
This page presented an issue for consideration in the CC license suite 4.0 versioning process. The discussions have now concluded with the publication of the 4.0 licenses, and the information on this page is now kept as an archive of previous discussions. The primary forum for issues relating to the 4.0 versioning process was the CC license discuss email list. You may subscribe to contribute to any continuing post-launch discussions, such as those surrounding compatibility and license translation. The wiki has been populated with links to relevant email threads from the mailing list where applicable, and other topics for discussion were raised in the 4.0/Sandbox. See the 4.0 page for more about the process.
Summary = Four licenses in the CC license suite -- CC BY, CC BY-SA, CC BY-NC, and CC BY-NC-SA -- allow licensees to create adaptations of the licensed work. By definition, an adaptation constitutes the new contributions by the person adapting the work and does not extend to the preexisting material.[1] Accordingly, when an adaptation of a CC-licensed work is created and licensed, the new license only applies to the adapter’s new contributions and not the original content. The original work is licensed to the downstream user directly from the original author. This is because CC licenses do not allow sub-licensing.[2] In other words, when someone uses an adapted work, they are often technically subject to two licenses, one for the adaptation and one for the original work. This nuance raises some complications with respect to the way CC licenses operate.
Contents
How to license adaptations
When a licensee creates an adaptation of a CC-licensed work, he is required to release adaptations under the same license if the original work is licensed with a ShareAlike condition. But if the the original is licensed under CC BY or CC BY-NC, there is no express requirement to license adaptations under particular terms and conditions. CC’s FAQ state that adaptations must be released under a license at least as restrictive as the original, but this obligation is not explicit in the license.
Rather, to create an adaptation of a work licensed CC BY, the license says the adapter must attribute the original work, identify that his new work is an adaptation, and include the URI for the license under which the original is released. If the creator of the adaptation complies with these conditions, he may believe he is free to release his adaptation under any license, including CC0, or keep all rights reserved.
Similarly, to create an adaptation of a work licensed CC BY-NC, the license says the adapter must meet the same requirements as BY, but also avoid using the original work for commercial purposes. If the creator of the adaptation complies with these conditions, including using his adaptation for non-commercial purposes only, he may believe he can license his adaptation without the NC condition.
CC’s license text has been criticized on this point for the following reasons:
- Because the license text does not explicitly dictate how adaptations must be licensed in CC BY and CC BY-NC, it is open to an interpretation that allows adaptations to be released under a less restrictive license, which may contradict the intentions of licensors.
- If adaptations are released under a different license than the original, it complicates the license obligations of downstream users as explained in detail below.
Proposal for dictating how adaptations are licensed in 4.0
- Add explicit requirement to BY and BY-NC stating that adaptations of licensed work must be released under a license with at least the same conditions as the original work.
- Pros:
- Cons
- Other comments:
License obligations of downstream users
As explained above, when someone creates an adaptation of a CC-licensed work and licenses it, the license on the adaptation only covers the adapter’s contributions and does not extend to the original content. To the extent the original work remains distinguishable in the adaptation, the original is licensed to the downstream user directly from the original licensor. In other words, the person using the adapted work is the licensee under two separate licenses -- one from the adapter with respect to the new elements (i.e. the adaptation), and one from the original creator with respect to the original.
This creates a number of complications:
- definition of “work”: because CC licensors are not obligated to identify exactly what “work” they are licensing, users of the adapted work may not be able to determine what elements of the literary or artistic work are original to the adapter
- attribution stacking: the user of the adapted work must attribute the licensor of the adaptation and the licensor of the original work to the extent she uses the work in a way that implicates the copyright in both
- conflicting obligations: if the adaptation is licensed under a different license than the original work, the user of the new work may be subject to conflicting license obligations when using the adapted work
Proposals for simplifying license compliance in 4.0
[Note: these proposals are not necessarily mutually exclusive]
- Require all licensors to fill in the “definition of work” to identify the elements covered by the license before applying any CC license.
- Pros:
- Cons
- Other comments:
- Require licensors of works that are adaptations of pre-existing works to include a clear notice that the license to the original work may also apply to those who use the adaptation.
- Pros:
- Cons
- Other comments:
- Add explicit requirement to all licenses stating that adaptations of licensed work must be marked to distinguish new content from the original work.
- Pros:
- Cons
- Other comments:
- Require licensors of works that are adaptations of pre-existing works to copy/paste (or otherwise specify) attribution requirements for the original works in a fixed location (to ease compliance by licensees with all applicable licenses).
- Pros:
- Cons
- Other comments:
[Please add other proposals here]
Related debate
We encourage you to sign up for the license discussion mailing list, where we will be debating these and other 4.0 proposals. HQ will provide links to related email threads from the license discussion mailing list here.
Relevant references
Please add citations that ought inform this 4.0 issue below.
Notes
- ↑ Article 2(3) of the Berne Convention: “Translations, adaptations, arrangements of music and other alterations of a literary or artistic work shall be protected as original works without prejudice to the copyright in the original work.” (emphasis added)
- ↑ See section 8(b) of CC BY: “Each time You Distribute or Publicly Preform an Adaptation, Licensor offers to the recipient a license to the original Work on the same terms and conditions as the license granted to You under this License.”