Difference between revisions of "Legal Tools Translation/4.0/German"
(Added details about the final 4.0 translation) |
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==Translation team== | ==Translation team== | ||
* John Weitzmann | * John Weitzmann | ||
+ | * Roland Alton-Scheidl | ||
+ | * Alexander Baratsits | ||
+ | * Simon Schlauri | ||
==Translation process== | ==Translation process== |
Revision as of 09:30, 21 January 2017
Contents
Jurisdictions
Austria, Germany, Italy, Luxembourg, Switzerland
Language coordination
This effort will be coordinated between the CC teams in Luxemburg, Italy, Switzerland, Austria and Germany, as in all these German is an official language.
Translation Status
4.0: Final.
CC0: In progress. Team has draft, but will synchronize with 4.0 language (as applicable) once that is finalized.
Key dates
4.0
First draft was submitted: 29 June 2016
Public comment period: - 12 July 2016
Translation officially published: 20 January 2017
CC0
First draft was submitted: 21 November 2016
Public comment period:
Translation officially published:
Translation team
- John Weitzmann
- Roland Alton-Scheidl
- Alexander Baratsits
- Simon Schlauri
Translation process
4.0
The lawyers of CC DE and CC AT have had a translation sprint in Vienna on January 21+22 2015. This has resulted in a unified first draft for CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 in German. It was handed over to Swiss lawyers for cross-checking. The public was notified of the comment period via the involved CC teams' websites, social media and other channels such as netzpolitik.org and several law blogs, the authors of which are part of the translation group's network.
The platform chosen for the commenting period is co-ment.com, an open source commenting solution for which hosting is offered. After the initial announcement of the commenting period, beginning of December 2015, the second round of announcements was sent directly to key people in the wider CC legal community via individual emails.
Key translation decisions and challenges
4.0
So far we encountered not many legally problematic bits. One of those is that in general, the legal meaning of "work" in Anglo-American law differs from that of "Werk" in German copyright law. Several words are challenging linguistically, in terms of policy. Especially the term for "Public License" is highly debated, with "Jedermannlizenz" as suggested in the First Draft not being widely accepted within the translation sprint group, mostly due to it being at odds with gender mainstreaming ideas.
Draft translation files
4.0