Unit 7. Selecting a license and registering material

7.1. Selecting a license

This section assumes the author wants to attach a general license for the work developed, and more particularly, that it is an open content license such as a CC license.

7.1.1. Before licensing

Obviously, before licensing, first the work should be developed. Then the author should decide which the allowed uses he or she wants for the work are. For example, the author may want his work to be inalterable, therefore prohibiting modifications. Although not necessary, it is better to decide the license before publishing the work, and attach the license from the beginning.

It is very important to check possible license implications of third party material (if used). For example, we may have used a resource that mandates that any work using it should maintain the original license for the resource.

7.1.2. Selecting an appropriate license

Once other implications are checked, and the allowed uses set, it is time to select the appropriate license. Usually, it will be a Creative Commons license as it is a general framework and the work will be probably more accessed by users.

Other option is to use another general license, or develop our own license. These could be more specific than CC licenses, with regard to the uses, and the geographical coveragetime span, etc.

7.1.3. Selecting a CC license

If we set on a CC license, selecting one of the 6 licenses available is an easy task. It is a matter of just choosing between:

  • (NC) Commercial or not
  • (SA) Share Alike or not (viral clause)
  • (ND) Derivative work allowed or not
7.1.4. Creative Commons choose a license tool

Creative Commons provides a tool that eases the task of selecting a CC license even more: the Creative Commons Choose a License tool. This tool asks the author to select the license using the NC, SA, and ND options, and asks for information about the work: title, author info, links to the resource, etc.

With this information, the tool generates:

  • Credit text with links, to attach to the resource
  • Icons with the graphical depiction of the license used
  • HTML code to embed in a web page to show license information