Difference between revisions of "Case Studies/Richard Stevens"

From Creative Commons
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 1: Line 1:
 
{{Case Study
 
{{Case Study
 +
|importance=Medium
 +
|quality=Start
 
|Description=Richard Stevens has been a major presence in webcomics for the better part of a decade, gaining notoriety through his popular webcomic Diesel Sweeties - in March of this year, he chose to release the entire archive under a CC BY-NC license.
 
|Description=Richard Stevens has been a major presence in webcomics for the better part of a decade, gaining notoriety through his popular webcomic Diesel Sweeties - in March of this year, he chose to release the entire archive under a CC BY-NC license.
 
|Mainurl=http://www.dieselsweeties.com/info.shtml
 
|Mainurl=http://www.dieselsweeties.com/info.shtml
Line 5: Line 7:
 
|User_Status=Creator
 
|User_Status=Creator
 
|Tag=webcomics comics artist
 
|Tag=webcomics comics artist
|License short name=CC BY-NC
+
|License_short_name=CC BY-NC
 
|Format=Image
 
|Format=Image
 
|Country=United States
 
|Country=United States

Revision as of 19:28, 14 September 2010


Media
Image
Adoption date unspecified
Tags
webcomics comics artist
Translations

.


Evaluation Information.png
Page Importance: Start
Page Quality: Medium
Richard Stevens has been a major presence in webcomics for the better part of a decade, gaining notoriety through his popular webcomic Diesel Sweeties - in March of this year, he chose to release the entire archive under a CC BY-NC license.

A few people I spoke to thought that CC-licensing and releasing free ebooks would hurt me financially, but it hasn’t. I think it frees me from the obligation to some day get every single strip into print, and the kind of person who wants comics on paper isn’t going to settle for screen-reading anyway! In the end, it just felt like a progressive choice. When you create new material on a constant basis, I don’t think you need to worry about people passing around copies of the old stuff. It’s not like they can pirate or scoop you on something that isn’t done yet. — Richard Stevens

Read our full Featured Commoner Interview with Richard for more information.