Difference between revisions of "I don’t mind other people using and adapting my work, but I want the derivative works to always remain available for others to use as well, so I should apply the SA term, correct?"

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(New page: {{CcLearn FAQ |Question=I don’t mind other people using and adapting my work, but I want the derivative works to always remain available for others to use as well, so I should apply the ...)
 
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|Question=I don’t mind other people using and adapting my work, but I want the derivative works to always remain available for others to use as well, so I should apply the SA term, correct?
 
|Question=I don’t mind other people using and adapting my work, but I want the derivative works to always remain available for others to use as well, so I should apply the SA term, correct?
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|Document=Applying Creative Commons licenses to your educational resources, Publishing Your Open Educational Resources on the Internet
 
|Target audience=instructors, OER creators
 
|Target audience=instructors, OER creators
 
|Tag=OER, derivatives, SA, Share Alike
 
|Tag=OER, derivatives, SA, Share Alike
 
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Correct, the Share Alike term requires that users who make derivatives of the originally licensed work to license the derivative work in the same way the original work was licensed to them. Therefore, to ensure your work remains available, use the Share Alike license in combination with other Creative Commons licenses to express just how free you would like that work to remain. Recall, though, that the Share Alike license only applies to derivatives, so uses that do not constitute derivatives are not required to re-license as Share Alike.
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Correct. The Share Alike term requires that users who make derivatives of the originally licensed work to license the derivative work in the same way the original work was licensed to them. Therefore, to ensure your work remains available, use the Share Alike license in combination with other Creative Commons licenses to express just how free you would like that work to remain. Recall, though, that the Share Alike license only applies to derivatives, so uses that do not constitute derivatives are not required to re-license as Share Alike.

Revision as of 17:53, 7 April 2009

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Correct. The Share Alike term requires that users who make derivatives of the originally licensed work to license the derivative work in the same way the original work was licensed to them. Therefore, to ensure your work remains available, use the Share Alike license in combination with other Creative Commons licenses to express just how free you would like that work to remain. Recall, though, that the Share Alike license only applies to derivatives, so uses that do not constitute derivatives are not required to re-license as Share Alike.