# Licensing

A big problem we had to deal with when forking off Sauerbraten has been licensing. Due to imprecise licensing of the content we were in need to throw all existing work aboard and take off. This is why we decided to introduce a strict guideline as following.

In general we accept every wide acknowledged license, which allows to share, modify, share the modified work, make commercial use or any combination of these. In following you see a list of few licenses we accept and below a list of licenses we don't, if you can't find a license in these lists and still unsure, don't hesitate to ask us about it.

# Licenses we are accepting:

Note: re. = recommendation

[1]: Open Definition (= OD) concentrates itself only on data and content. So OD don't recommend nor reject licenses which weren't mean for content/data in the first place.

license name our re. FSF (opens new window) re. OD (opens new window) re. Fedora (opens new window) re. Debian (opens new window) re. public domain alike perm- issive copy- left
CCO 1.0 or any later version
CC BY 3.0 or any later version
CC BY-SA 3.0 or any later version
ZLIB [1]
MIT [1]
GPLv2 or any later version [1]

# Why we don't recommend Public Domain

The problem with Public Domain is that the definition is different from jurisdication to jurisdication, there isn't an international declaration. Also in some jurisdication it's very complicated till impossible to make your work Public Domain before your rights expire after the ordinary time. Instead of Public Domain we recommend using CC0 (Creative Commons Zero) (opens new window). CC0 is basically a license, which gives the creator a way to waive all their copyright and related rights in their works to the fullest extent allowed by law + a Public Domain fallback if the waiving of the rights isn't possible under special circumstances.

# "or any later version" phrase

While some licenses, which have different versions, apply such an "or any later version" phrase via default, some of the licenses requires you explicit to mention "or any later version". E.g. the Creative Commons >= 2.0 licenses have this phrase, so everybody is free to license derivations of "CC BY-SA 2.0 Generic" content under the terms of "CC BY-SA 4.0 International". Other licenses like the GNU GPL license requires you explicit to write "GPLv2 or any later version." We recommend for every license, which has or may has in the future more than one version, and which doesn't have via default such a phrase, do write it down on your own. This helps that content doesn't stuck with one ancient license forever, which could be incompatible with future law.


# Licenses we don't accept:

license name share modify commerical FSF (opens new window) OD (opens new window) Fedora (opens new window) Debian (opens new window)
CC BY / CC BY-SA below v3.0 ?
CC BY-ND any version
CC BY-NC any version
CC BY-NC-SA any version
CC BY-NC-ND any version
no license at all

# Licenses aiming at one special jurisdication

We reject content which is licensed under the terms of a license which aims at one special jurisdication. We consider ourselves as an international community, moreover we define freedom as the freedom for everyone, everywhere. So please don't use such licenses which could cause troubles, e.g. all Creative Commons licenses before the 4.0 versions have local derivations (opens new window) for a lot of countries (e.g. CC BY 3.0 DE (opens new window)). Starting with CC v4.0 there is only one international license to address this issue.

# Common mistakes:

  • missing version number of the license (if exists), e.g. "Creative Commons BY"
  • missing full name of the license, e.g. "licensed under a Creative Commons license"
  • mix between the short form and the complete name, e.g. "Creative Commons BY Attribution 4.0"

# Changelog

19.10.2014: initial declaration

12.10.2015: change phrasing "We are very likely to reject content which is licensed under the terms of a license which aims at one special jurisdication." to "we reject [...]"