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Hi there,

Basically, I'm struggling to understand copyright law and creative commons. Could anybody explain to me or point me in the direction of a website that explains it clearly and in an easy to understand way? I've searched in the past but I never seemed to find anything of much help. Also, are the two similar or entirely different?

Thanks in advance.

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What's wrong with the Creative Commons home page? What's wrong with wikipedia's entry? Why don't you like those resources? What's incomplete, confusing or contradictory? – S.Lott Oct 8 at 11:21
Nothing is wrong with anything or in any way contradictory, I just never felt able to understand it fully. It's not that I don't like them either. Some people understand algebra better than others and pick it up quicker for want of an example, I find this slightly difficult to get my head around instead. Creative commons is what confuses me the most - all the different types of licenses that are available. – Emma Oct 8 at 11:30
Our explanations are likely to be similar to those provided by Wikipedia and Creative Commons, as they're fairly clear already. – ceejayoz Oct 8 at 14:14
They may well be, don't think I haven't looked. The wiki article is long and talks about lots of different things with regards to the licenses. But sometimes I find it easier if somebody explains something to me in a nutshell as if they were speaking to me. You don't have to answer the question if you don't want to, but please don't try and make me feel stupid or wrong for asking because you don't understand what I find hard to get about it. Thankyou to those who answered, I understand it a lot more than earlier on :) – Emma Oct 8 at 15:00

closed as not programming related by GateKiller, Johannes Rössel, ceejayoz, dmckee, Shog9 Oct 11 at 17:13

3 Answers

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Copyright is the right of ownership and control of works that you create. It applies specifically to the text of the work. Creative Commons is a license that the copyright holder grants to others to allow their use of the work covered by the license. This is true of the many other possible licenses (BSD, MIT, etc.). Copyright basically says -- this belongs to Y, if you use it you must get Y's permission. Licensing, including Creative Commons, is a way for Y to say you can do A, B, and C with my work without asking, but I reserve to myself rights D, E, and F. Copyright itself grants certain "fair use" rights to non-copyright holders. Different jurisdictions have different rules about copyright and you are best off checking with the particular jurisdiction about what rights are reserved and conferred by copyright in that jurisdiction. You can find info on US Copyright law at the website of the US Copyright Office.

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Copyright stems from book publishing and is, generally speaking (there may be country variations), the right of the author of a work to declare their ownership of the work and their ability to control how and for what recompense the work is reproduced. You'll often see a copyright message followed by "All rights reserved" which is explicitly declaring that the author is not imbuing you with an rights over the work itself.

Copyright in the UK at least does not require any kind of registration of same, the author can simply declare their copyright by stating (normally within the work) "Copyright Year-asserted Their Name". This goes back to the Statute of Ann in 1709.

Creative Commons is a license to use a copyrighted work under specific guidelines, normally all copyrighted works are subject to some kind of license that details how and when you can 'use' the work.

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Creative Commons builds upon copyright law to achieve what it does:

Creative Commons licenses are not an alternative to copyright. They work alongside copyright, so you can modify your copyright terms to best suit your needs.

However, it is intended to free the artist from most of the legal cruft when it comes to define terms for redistribution:

Our tools give everyone from individual creators to large companies and institutions a simple, standardized way to grant copyright permissions to their creative work. The Creative Commons licenses enable people to easily change their copyright terms from the default of “all rights reserved” to “some rights reserved.”

You can find more information on their home page.

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