Authors who want their works to be generally available and to be usable in ways they may not have thought of themselves, such as the authors of this curriculum, will often include with their works a general license allowing anyone to use them, such as a Creative Commons license.
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- Creative Commons is a specific family of copyright licenses that allow others to use, share, maybe sell, and maybe revise your work.
Look at the very bottom of this page. This curriculum is under a CC-BY-NC-SA license, which is a Creative Commons (CC) license meaning that anyone can use and publish the curriculum or a modification of it, provided that they credit the authors (BY The University of California, Berkeley, and Education Development Center, Inc.), they use it not for profit (NC, non-commercially), and they license any modified version under the same terms (SA, share-alike). Because of the NC part, this is not technically a "free license," which would allow use for any purpose (including for profit). People argue over whether it's ethically necessary to allow that much freedom of use.
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Ideas similar to Creative Commons are used for particular kinds of material:
- Free software means software that anyone can copy, use, modify, and redistribute, including commercially, provided that any modifications must be under the same license.
Doesn't the “provided that” make it unfree?
The reason for that restriction is to prevent other people from turning a modified version of the software into non-free software with restrictive licensing. That's the only thing you're not allowed to do: make it unfree.
- Open source software is a more general term that means that you make the program's source (human-readable) code available to anyone. You may still restrict how people can use the program.
What's the point of making it available if people aren't allowed to use it?
One reason is for security software, so that people can check that the software isn't leaking your password or other data, and will therefore trust you. (One reason many people don't trust computerized voting machines is that their manufacturers keep their code secret.) Another reason for open source is that you're hoping other people will contribute improvements to your proprietary software.
- Open access scholarly research reports are available for free download, rather than requiring the permission of a journal publisher.
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Why would an author give away the right to make copies of a work? Generally it's because the author wants to contribute to the community, doesn't want to be greedy, and hopes that the work will be widely used and enjoyed. Open licensing has enabled broad access to digital information.