Difference between revisions of "Developers"
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'''Welcome to the CC Developer Community!''' This is where you'll find all | '''Welcome to the CC Developer Community!''' This is where you'll find all | ||
− | about the technologies and software products that CC uses to | + | about the technologies and software products that CC uses to further |
forward our mission to maximize digital creativity, sharing, and | forward our mission to maximize digital creativity, sharing, and | ||
innovation. | innovation. |
Revision as of 17:10, 24 August 2016
Welcome to the CC Developer Community! This is where you'll find all about the technologies and software products that CC uses to further forward our mission to maximize digital creativity, sharing, and innovation.
Get Involved
All of the projects developed at Creative Commons are free software, and many are run as active free software projects -- so outside involvement is key to its success. But you don't have to be a software developer to join us--we'd love to have you in the discussion if you're a user researcher, designer, translator, or just interested in the topic.
- Join our mailing list
- IRC
- Chat with us real-time on IRC
- Active Projects
- See Hackspace
Older projects
- OpenHome
- A Creative Commons homepage with your content
- Google Summer of Code 2013
- Ideas and more.
- Localization
- Find out how to help the Creative Commons community with translations.
Core Technologies
- RDFa
- Standard for adding machine-readable statements to web pages.
- CcREL
- Language for adding licensing information to web pages.
- LRMI
- Language for describing educational resources on the web.
- Liblicense (outdated)
- Library for embedding licensing metadata into files of various formats.