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i am searching for the correct license for my software project on GitHub. I use only the FREE GitHub-Repository, so it has to be an OpenSource-License (which is okay for me). I really like Creative Commons licenses because they are simple to understand - but they aren't suitable for software..

so in creative commons terms i search a license with:

Attribution — You must attribute the work in the manner specified by the author or licensor (but not in any way that suggests that they endorse you or your use of the work).

Noncommercial — You may not use this work for commercial purposes.

Share Alike — If you alter, transform, or build upon this work, you may distribute the resulting work only under the same or similar license to this one.

Source: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/

For myself i want to keep the right to use my software commercially (even if i don't intend that currently).

Additionally i want to give the graphics in my software project an own license - here i can use the CC BY-NC-SA, right? How can i manage that correctly in GitHub? Can i upload the images in the (FREE) github repository too, with that license in that special folder or do i have to take an external source for it? (because it doesn't match GitHubs requirements for free repositories)

A short summary of my questions:

  • Which is a 'CC BY-NC-SA' like open source license i can use in my free GitHub repository?
  • Can i use 'CC BY-NC-SA' license for my graphics/images in my repository?
  • Which is the best way to combine these two things in a free GitHub repository?
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    "noncommercial" seems to be very hard to define in the context of software. Would you care to try defining it more accurately yourself?
    – wolfgang
    Aug 17, 2012 at 9:40
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    hm, okay i try: i want to allow everybody to see my code and use/change it as long as he/she doesn't make money with it. For myself i want to keep the option to make money with my software in the future. If anyone else wants to use my code commercially he/she needs to ask me for permission..
    – tector
    Aug 19, 2012 at 9:19

1 Answer 1

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I'm not aware that github imposes any requirements on how your code is licensed, beyond stating that "you agree to allow others to view and fork your repositories" (https://help.github.com/articles/github-terms-of-service).

So, you can almost use any licensing conditions you want. If you drop a file named "LICENSE.txt" in your repository, most people will get the message. If people ignore the message, either ignore them, or consult your lawyer and be prepared to pay him/her.

If you stray away from the "standard" licenses, however, your code will be less useful to others.

The classical "BY-SA" license for software would be the GPL. It is not a BY-NC-SA license, but among popular free software licenses it is probably one of the most "restrictive".

When you put your software under a free/open-source license, you are not giving up any rights. You (irrevocably, in most cases) grant some rights to others. This is an important distinction, because you always keep the right to use your own software commercially.

If you want to sell your software as proprietary software later, you can simply license it under a different (proprietary license) in addition to the free software license you've decided on. You can't "recall" published free versions, but you don't need to make any of your future improvements available as free software.

There are several different ways in which other people might make money off your software:

  • They might develop a new and improved version of your software and sell it as proprietary software (you don't get to see or use their improvements without paying!). The GPL prohibits this (if you wanted to allow that, you'd use a "non-copyleft" license, like the BSD or X11 licenses)

  • They might sell your software, unchanged, bundle it with books or otherwise redistribute it for money. The GPL allows this, but this is a good thing in many ways, as you might get a free-of-charge distribution network. There's not a lot of money in this anymore nowadays, as people will just download the software (for free) instead. There may be some obscure free software licenses that prohibit that.

  • Someone might offer to improve the software, but demand money for his work. This is OK, as the results of the paid-for work will afterwards be available to everyone free of charge. I don't see how a license agreement can possibly prevent this.

  • Someone might offer support contracts for your software. Again, I don't see how you could (or why you would) prohibit this. If you allow me to use your software, I can pay someone else to help me use it.

  • When you decide to sell a new-and-improved proprietary version of your software, someone might improve the free version of the software and compete against you, undercutting your price. They don't really make money from it, but you might not like it. Free/Open Source licenses are non-revocable (by definition, I think), so you can't do much about it (revocable freedoms are no freedoms at all).

  • Someone might use your software, and might make money doing it. Prohibiting this contradicts both the Open Source Definition (http://opensource.org/osd.html/ Point 6) and the Free Software Definition (http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html "Freedom 0"). A free software program does not have small print attached that tells you how you may and may not use it.

Summary: Consider the GPL. It is the strongest popular license on the ShareAlike front. If you want to be more restrictive, your code won't really be that free anymore, and people won't be able to combine your code with other (e.g. GPL-licensed) code.

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    Thank you for that excellent in-depth answer! it really helps me to find the right license..
    – tector
    Aug 28, 2012 at 10:07
  • Is GPL still the best option for his case or CC BY-NC is better suited nowadays creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0
    – Guy Luz
    Aug 21, 2020 at 19:15
  • @GuyLuz As far as I know CC licenses still aren't really intended for software. All the legal language there is written with artworks or literary works in mind.
    – wolfgang
    Sep 2, 2020 at 11:54
  • Has the argument ever been made that once you've applied a restrictive license to your software and published it, you cannot then yourself use that software in a commercial product? You say you retain the right but that doesn't make sense to me. What if the project now has many contributors, a community, etc. You can just go against your own GPL anytime you want?
    – xendi
    Oct 12, 2020 at 15:39
  • @xendi Once you accept contributions, it's not your project anymore, but yours and your contributors. Unless you've made different arrangements (such as copyright assignment), their contribution is licensed to you by them under the GPL. You can still go against your own GPL, but not against theirs.
    – wolfgang
    Oct 17, 2020 at 8:08

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