Web Integration/HowTo
The goal of this HowTo is to provide a basic step-by-step guide to the technical concerns when incorporating CC license metadata functionality into your web application. This guide has been generalized from various plans for video, audio, or image sharing sites.
Below are 5 areas where integration can occur in your web application. While each web application may not need each of the 5 integrations, Creative Commons recommends that as many as practical are implemented.
Contents
1. License Choice on file upload
Users should be able to choose which license they want for each file they upload.
This will allow users to make fine-grain decisions about their works (so that some are CC and some are still All Rights Reserved)
- Tools to use:
2. Default License choice in account settings
In account settings, users should be able to specify a default license for their content they create on the site.
This can be combined with License Choice on File Upload to allow users to have the default license be, for example, CC:BY and in special cases some others be CC:BY-SA, or even All Rights Reserved.
- Tools to use:
3. Include license RDFa on content pages
Including RDFa code signals to machines (search engines, browsers, etc) exactly how a specific work is licensed.
This allows works to be scraped by search engines and other automatic content discovery services with associated license metadata.
4. Include copyable attribution language with RDFa
This is similar to practice to video embed code from services such as YouTUBE. However, this HTML is for bloggers and other republishers easily attribute a work fully and correctly.
- Tools to use:
- Web Services, RDFa, and ccREL
5. License aware user interfaces
Utilize all of the license metadata to provide new and interesting interfaces to view content based on the license data.
Adopters
We have a long list of Content Directories which are basically sites, projects and people who have implemented CC licensing and/or have some type of CC licensing. This is the best list of high level CC license adopters, all generated from the community. NOTE: CC does not have a database of content or keep a defacto list of all those who use CC licenses. The list above is used to provide examples.
Assistance
If you are hoping to adopt this, please contact Fred Benenson (fred [at] creativecommons.org) and/or http://creativecommons.org/contact