RE: [Corpora-List] license question

From: Rayson, Paul (rayson@exchange.lancs.ac.uk)
Date: Mon Aug 21 2006 - 14:59:01 MET DST

  • Next message: Emmanuel PROCHASSON: "Re: [Corpora-List] license question"

    Hi,

    The "Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives" and "Attribution
    Non-commercial Share Alike" are suitable for non-commercial use:

    http://creativecommons.org/about/licenses/meet-the-licenses

    Does anyone have any experience of using these CC types for academic
    licensees alongside commercial licences for non-academic licensees? I'm
    thinking, picking an example at random, of a creative commons licence
    for a semantic lexicon which academic users can use for free alongside
    something where commercial users come and talk to us separately for
    licensing.

    Regards,
    Paul.

    Dr. Paul Rayson
    Director of UCREL
    Computing Department, Infolab21, South Drive, Lancaster University,
    Lancaster, LA1 4WA, UK.
    Web: http://www.comp.lancs.ac.uk/computing/users/paul/
    Tel: +44 1524 510357 Fax: +44 1524 510492

    -----Original Message-----
    From: owner-corpora@lists.uib.no [mailto:owner-corpora@lists.uib.no] On
    Behalf Of Andy Roberts
    Sent: 18 August 2006 18:06
    To: Serge Sharoff
    Cc: Alexander Paile; lars.borin@svenska.gu.se; Corpora list
    Subject: RE: [Corpora-List] license question

    On Fri, 18 Aug 2006, Serge Sharoff wrote:

    > This is why I advocate the procedure of distributing an
    > Internet-derived corpus as a list of URLs. The arguments in prior
    > cases against "deep linking" concerned situations with competing
    > services or mistaken identity. These cases can't apply to corpus
    > distribution. If the procedure for corpus compilation remains
    > constant, the resulting corpus recompiled on the target computer will
    > be almost the same as the original. More information on the procedure
    > and tools is available from:
    > http://corpus.leeds.ac.uk/internet.html
    >

    This approach is obviously fine if your source is in fact the web.
    However, it's my impression here that Alexander acquired the resources
    via other means.

    >> Whilst you may argue that a license like LGPL would ensure that the
    >> corpus remained Free (that is, redistribution must stay under LGPL
    and
    >> any modifications, if distributed, must also be released under LGPL)
    is
    >> doesn't prevent people from either charging for the corpus or prevent
    >> its inclusion within a commercial product. This may not be acceptable
    to
    >> the copyright holder who originally intended their materials to be
    used
    >> within (not-for-profit?) research only.
    > However, can you solve this problem with an appropriate license
    > derived from http://creativecommons.org/ ?
    >

    Yes.

    The GPL and LGPL are licenses from the Free Software Foundation.
    Without going into a long license debate, the GPL licenses are aimed at
    software and it's all about the preservation of Free (not to be confused
    with free: no monetary charge) and Open code.

    There's nothing nothing in the GPL licenses that restricts the
    commercial use of GPL licensed code. That may not bother the OP in this
    instance, but I believe that the CreativeCommons licenses are still more
    suitable in this instance. A CC Attribution Share Alike license is
    roughly equivalent to the LGPL, however, you could be more restrictive
    with CC specify a Non-commercial clause too. This restriction would be
    more appealing to copyright owners when handing over materials, I would
    have thought.

    Andy



    This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Mon Aug 21 2006 - 15:23:12 MET DST