wp:Granting work into the public domain

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Advice for users of our content

Advice for editors and uploaders

It is not unreasonable to put your content in the public domain, but we advise you to also license it under a CC BY license or a free-use license if you desire a "softer" fallback than the GNU FDL. Note that all text is licensed by the uploader or editor under a CC BY-SA license (both on the edit form and on the upload submission form) if they have the rights to do so.

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Also, if the work is not yours but the author made a statement releasing it into the public domain, it is recommended (but not required) that you contact them to see if they'll additionally make a statement releasing all rights. If so, add a free-use license tag as well.

The free-use tags that have been created for user contributions are:

  • {{tl|CC0}} This is the preferred choice for all new self-released public domain works.
  • {{tl|CopyrightedFreeUse-Link}}
  • {{tl|NoRightsReserved}}
  • {{tl|LicenseFreeUse}}
  • {{tl|TextLicenseFreeUse}}
  • {{tl|ImageLicenseFreeUse}}
  • {{tl|TextLicenseMinorFreeUse}}

Links

  • [http://c2.com/cgi/wiki?PublicDomain Wiki Wiki Web: Public Domain]: "The opinion on the OSI license approval discussion list is that it's no longer possible to release your work to the public domain in the USA. Technically speaking, the copyright always stays with you even if you don't claim it anywhere."
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20130407033343/http://www.debalie.nl/artikel.jsp?articleid=12829 De Balie: Public Domain FAQ]: "In fact the phrase "public domain" has no legal status at all in the UK."
  • A private e-mail from the U.S. Copyright Office sent to User:Dcoetzee that says, among other things, "Please be advised that one may not grant their work into the public domain. However, a copyright owner may release all of their rights to their work by stating the work may be freely reproduced, distributed, etc."
  • Our own article on public domain: "Any work receives copyright by default and copyright law generally doesn't provide any special means to "abandon" copyright so that a work can enter the public domain [ . . . ] A copyright holder can explicitly disclaim any proprietary interest in the work, effectively granting it to the public domain, by providing a licence to this effect. A suitable licence will grant permission for all of the acts which are restricted by copyright law."
  • In response to these concerns, Creative Commons published the [http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0 CC0] copyright waiver in 2009. It is the best tool to legally release all copyright on a work, as it provides adequate fallback permissions in case any part of the waiver is deemed legally invalid.
  • {{cite web | author=Baron, Robert A. | title=Making the Public Domain Public | publisher=VRA Bulletin | date=2000 | url=http://www.studiolo.org/IP/VRA-TM-SF-PublicDomain.htm}}

See also