Aug 17 2005
license to license
You can now set the license under which your RSS feeds are available by visiting your settings page and choosing “license.”
Joshua Schachter · joshua Tags: features Bookmark this
Aug 17 2005
You can now set the license under which your RSS feeds are available by visiting your settings page and choosing “license.”
Joshua Schachter · joshua Tags: features Bookmark this
7 Comments
Esparta::doBlog()&hellip | Aug 17 2005 at 2:36 pm
Del.icio.us con Creative Commons
ベイエリア情報局&hellip | Aug 18 2005 at 12:42 am
del.icio.usでRSSのライセンスが選択できるようになった
license to license You can now set the l…
joga&hellip | Aug 18 2005 at 11:03 am
del.icio.us + creative commons
from del.icio.us blog:
You can now set the license under which your RSS feeds are available by visiting your settings page and choosing “license.”
…
tecosystems&hellip | Aug 18 2005 at 5:08 pm
del.icio.us Gets Into the Commons
As more users of Josh Schachter’s del.icio.us service begin using it as I do, as a quasi-link blog, there were bound to be questions about copyright, cross-posting, etc. To preempt such issues, del.icio.us now offers the ability to license the…
Björn Lindström | Aug 24 2005 at 7:43 am
A “public domain licence” is an oxymoron. The Creative Commons home page has some advice on how to dedicate stuff to the public domain.
Tim Wesson | Aug 24 2005 at 7:39 pm
The phrase “public domain licence” is a shortened form of “public domain copyright licence”, which is not a contradiction, for it simply means that the licencee has complete licence to do what they wish with the work. As a licence grants rights that the licencee would otherwise not have, the granting of a licence for all uses might appear a somewhat strange way of entering a work into the public domain, but it does at least make explicit that that’s what the licensor is doing.
It is important to note that in some countries, copyrights never expire, so it is important to dedicate the work (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_domain#Expiration ), whatever John Dvorak says about this (http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,1895,1838249,00.asp ).
Björn Lindström | Aug 29 2005 at 5:04 am
Good to hear you thought about it, at least. Anyway, it’d be nice if you added support for the RDF metadata descriptions of the licenses that CC has developed (http://creativecommons.org/technology/embedding), so that it would work with things like mozCC (http://www.yergler.net/projects/mozcc/), licensing-aware search engines, &c.