calamarain wrote:
if the sound/music is triggered by any kind of event, then the entire derivative work (i.e. the hold) must be released under the Creative Commons license. I believe this applies even under the most liberal creative commons license.
I think I'm to blame for your interpretation of these licenses, and I'd like to clarify what I think is happening here. (Other readers, if you can be bothered, you can read up on the various CC licenses at creativecommons.org)
The relevant difference is not specific to CC. Say you want to "
do something"
with other people's copyrighted works. While all of the following require permissions (i.e. licenses), it matters whether you're 1) just distributing unmodified copies 2) making a collection / anthology / sampler / whatever of unmodified copies or 3) creating a modified work based on another person's copyrighted work but with your own contributions.
These (and others) count as separate rights reserved to the copyright holder, and you need separate permissions for each. There are different CC licenses, each of which may give you some but not others of these permissions.
Now the sticky thing Calamarin refers to is that the CC licenses specifically point out that using music and sound effects "
synced"
with moving pictures is always considered to be an "
Adaptation"
rather than just a "
Collection"
in their terminology, and that you thus need the copyright holder's permission to make derivative works.
This gives us the following distribution: If anything is licensed under one of the CC "
no derivatives"
licenses, then you can't use it at all in the cases Calamarin describes. If anything is licensed under a "
share alike"
license, then you
can use it, but have to use the same license for the entire hold. If one of the remaining two CC licenses is used ("
attribution"
and "
attribution-noncommercial"
), then you can use the sound and still choose your own license for the complete hold.
Usual restrictions apply. I'm not a lawyer and not involved in Creative Commons. If you want to be really sure, ask them, not me.
[Last edited by Znirk at 09-20-2007 04:25 PM]