Le 01/12/2017 à 14:06, Federico Leva (Nemo) a écrit :
mathieu stumpf guntz, 01/12/2017 03:00:
Actually, as far as I know, CC-by-sa-3.0-undeed
states nothing about
/suis generis/ rights
I don't know what's -undeed, but 3.0-it and 4.0 do, which is for
instance why ISTAT data can be imported in Wikidata despite the less
than ideal license (CC-BY-3.0-it).
Federico
Sorry, I meant "unported", that is whith no specific claims
about local
juridiction. So, in a nutshell, ported versions of CC-3.0 of European
countries such as Italy or France do include clauses related to /suis
generis/ rights, while the unported version.
And to be complete "undeed" is the Creative Commons sobriquet for "full
legal code", as opposed to the simple "deed" presentation for the layman:
The Commons Deed is a handy reference for licensors and licensees,
summarizing and expressing some of the most important terms and
conditions. Think of the Commons Deed as a user-friendly interface
to the Legal Code beneath, although the Deed itself is not a
license, and its contents are not part of the Legal Code itself.
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/
Uncreatively,
mathieu