Difference between revisions of "Interoperability between Creative Commons licenses and GFDL"
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== CC-by == | == CC-by == | ||
− | + | [[CC-by]] is one-way-compatible with GFDL - meaning that CC-by content can be used in GFDL work, by not vice-versa. | |
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+ | Source: James Grimmelmann, Associate Professor at New York Law School, (Institute for Information Law and Policy). ([http://lists.ibiblio.org/pipermail/cc-licenses/2007-April/005473.html <nowiki>[cc-licenses]</nowiki> CC-BY=>CC-BY-SA/GFDL], Apr 19, 2007.) | ||
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+ | See also [http://lists.wikimedia.org/pipermail/wikinews-l/2005-September/000329.html<nowiki>[Wikinews-l]</nowiki> The Wikinews Licensure Poll is closed], Sep 2005. | ||
== Non-commercial licenses == | == Non-commercial licenses == |
Revision as of 11:07, 4 May 2008
Interoperability between CC-by-sa and GFDL has been requested by the Wikimedia Foundation board, which in late November 2007 passed a resolution:
- The Foundation requests that the GNU Free Documentation License be modified in the fashion proposed by the FSF to allow migration by mass collaborative projects to the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA license. -- Progress on license interoperability with Wikipedia, Mike Linksvayer, Creative Commons blog, December 1st, 2007.
When is this actually happening?
CC-by
CC-by is one-way-compatible with GFDL - meaning that CC-by content can be used in GFDL work, by not vice-versa.
Source: James Grimmelmann, Associate Professor at New York Law School, (Institute for Information Law and Policy). ([cc-licenses] CC-BY=>CC-BY-SA/GFDL, Apr 19, 2007.)
See also [Wikinews-l] The Wikinews Licensure Poll is closed, Sep 2005.
Non-commercial licenses
No NC license can ever be compatible with GFDL.
Footnotes
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