Difference between revisions of "License RDF"

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Creative Commons provides information on licenses for three audiences: lawyers, humans and machines.  The machine-readable information is described using [http://www.w3.org/RDF RDF] and made available from the Subversion repository in the [http://cctools.svn.sourceforge.net/viewvc/cctools/license.rdf/trunk/license_rdf license.rdf/license_rdf] module.
 
Creative Commons provides information on licenses for three audiences: lawyers, humans and machines.  The machine-readable information is described using [http://www.w3.org/RDF RDF] and made available from the Subversion repository in the [http://cctools.svn.sourceforge.net/viewvc/cctools/license.rdf/trunk/license_rdf license.rdf/license_rdf] module.
  

Revision as of 20:43, 29 January 2008

Creative Commons provides information on licenses for three audiences: lawyers, humans and machines. The machine-readable information is described using RDF and made available from the Subversion repository in the license.rdf/license_rdf module.

File Naming

Files in the license_rdf module are named using the following convention:

creativecommons.org_license_[license-code]_[version]_[jurisdiction]_.rdf

More generally, you can take the URL of a license (i.e. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/), strip the protocol information (http://) and replace all forward-slashes (/) with underscores (_) to arrive at the base filename. Liblicense provides a function to perform this mapping for you.

File Contents

Each file contains the RDF (encoded as RDF/XML) describing the particular license. Information described by the RDF includes:

  • license name, including translations
  • license description, including translations
  • license properties, as described by ccREL

Usages

The license RDF files are used in the following CC applications: