Share-alike: Difference between revisions

2,983 bytes added ,  6 September 2004
complete article on share-alike issues, including viral license debate (same issue different name)
(#REDIRECT sharealike)
 
(complete article on share-alike issues, including viral license debate (same issue different name))
 
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#REDIRECT [[sharealike]]
'''Share-alike''' is a required reintegration clause of several [[parametric license]]s in [[Creative Commons]] and some monolithic ones like [[GFDL]].  It simply means that anyone improving a work must share the improved work with others who wish to use or improve it. 
 
It is a key feature of the [[GPL]] too which applies this principle to [[source code]].  It is sometimes called the '''viral license''' feature (see below) - the fact that accepting the license breeds more acceptance of the license.  This is considered very desirable by some and very undesirable by others (who started the [[open source]] movement to oppose the '''share-alike''' requirement.  ''See also [[problems with free software and open source models]].''
 
The most common '''share-alike''' licenses used are in '''open content''' and in '''free documentation''' efforts, which require such licenses by definition:
 
*the [[GFDL]], strictly share-alike, no license but the GFDL can apply to any improvements, and there are strict rules about what can go in [[Secondary Section]]s and [[Invariant Section]]s to which asymmetric rules might apply - this license is used at [[Wikipedia]]
 
*the [[CC-by-sa]] license, quite close to the [[GFDL]] but is incompatible with it.  ''Things licensed under the CC regime are not part of the [[GFDL Corpus]].''  This license is used at [[Wikitravel]]
 
Most efforts use share alike licenses for both code and content, e.g. the '''CC-nc-sa''' license - the closest approximation yet to a [[Green Documentation License]] - is used for [[GetWiki]] code.
 
''See [[w:Share_Alike]] for a more general introduction linked to other legal topics.''
 
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See [[GPL]] and other [[free software]] [[license]]s to understand the details of what is meant by a '''viral license'''. 
 
This term is '''''not well defined'''' and should be avoided.  [[Microsoft]] widely uses the term '''viral''' to portray both free software and consortia as being like [[computer virus]] creators, exploiting the confusion.
 
The term is also sometimes used to imply [[required reintegration]], which is the controversial requirement that [[open source]] objects to in both free software and [[Consortium license]] software.  When this is what is being discussed, it is far better to use this more specific term and not "'''viral'''".
 
Some think they are two separate concerns, but they aren't:  [[required reintegration]] *is* a part of making a license viral - without it, new software under new licenses can be produced, thus making the original license not apply, and thus not viral, or "as" viral, as the original.
 
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[[faction]]al comment:
 
[[Reds]] prefer [[Free Software]] apparently because everything "has to be free".
 
[[Golds]] prefer [[Open Source]] apparently so they can exploit the commons without obligation to give back.
 
[[Trolls]] like sharing, but bite you on the leg if you try to tell them they have to share with you, even if you are doing harm to them.
Anonymous user