Hot answers tagged copyright
511
The American Censorship link includes a lot of information about what this US law would change and how it would affect user-generated content sites like Stack Overflow.
Currently, if someone posts copyright material to Stack Overflow, there is a well-established legal procedure (called the DMCA) that establishes how the copyright owner can get that material ...
143
Stack Overflow is licenced under Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Generic, which states:
Attribution — You must attribute the work in the manner specified by the author or licensor (but not in any way that suggests that they endorse you or your use of the work).
I think it is pretty clear that they have failed to do this (or any attribution whatsoever). So ...
73
In order to protect Stack Overflow, Super User, and Server Fault from a flood of "How do I use ssh to get around The Great Firewall of America" it is important this law does not pass.
The system message is the least intrusive method we could come up with (vs writing regexes and parsers to try to detect those questions once the law passes). I hope you ...
45
When a user acts in that manner, there are two things that should be done (possibly three):
The question should be edited to remove anything that's not actually a part of the question. (This is true for all questions -- but it bears repeating here, since the 'terms of reading' is not a part of the question)
You could direct the user to read the FAQ, ...
30
There's a bit of confusion in some of the answers here. This is what I told the user responsible for that notice:
As noted in the FAQ,
If you are not comfortable with the idea of your contributions being collaboratively edited by other trusted users, this may not be the site for you.
In order to post or participate on Stack Overflow, you must agree to ...
30
When you see things like that, edit them out, they are obviously not part of the question. If the user rolls-back, you could re-edit posting a comment asking the OP to avoid rolling back again, but this might cause the situation to degenerate, so preferably, flag it for Moderator Attention to err on the safer side.
Second, when you register yourself to the ...
28
SOPA is bad for anyone who uses & depends upon the Internet. Hyperbole? No.
Brad Feld, a former entrepreneur-turned VC, has written a letter to be sent to our (I live in Colorado also) senators and has, through the post below, asked other CO entrepreneurs to become co-signatories prior to sending it.
As stated by Joel, Brad and dozens of others, the ...
25
When I upload an image via the little button on the Stack Exchange form, there's no indication that I'm doing anything but uploading my image to Stack Exchange. Therefore I expect that it is included in the normal content agreement here — namely, that it becomes Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike (CC BY SA).
It doesn't matter if SE has some backend ...
21
Since I think I count as the "powers-that-be":
Imgur's "normal" terms of service do not apply to pictures you upload through Stack Exchange.
As far as rights go, your deal is with us, and is subject to our terms of service, privacy policy, and cc-wiki content license.
That means that the images you upload are covered under our "attribution required" ...
20
These content copies are so annoying, so I created a Safari/Chrome Plugin that rewrites google links and also redirects from efreedom, questionhub, answerspice to stackoverflow. Problem: solved!
It's free and open source, so feel free to use it.
GitHub:
https://github.com/steipete/stackoverflowerizer
19
I do believe the problem is with the following paragraph:
Attribution — You must attribute the
work in the manner specified by the
author or licensor (but not in any way
that suggests that they endorse you or
your use of the work).
(emphasis is mine)
What's this manner specified? I think this is too subjective. How can you just point at people ...
19
This may be mostly opinion, I don't know, but it seems that many of the technology-affecting laws that find themselves under consideration at the national level in the U.S. are written, bought and paid for by the entertainment industry (MPAA and RIAA) and wind up trampling individual's rights as well as established fair-use doctrine.
This proposal is no ...
17
I think GotW installments would be terrific on StackOverflow. It would have to fall under the cc-wiki license, because we make dumps of the site available regularly, and people who consume those dumps will assume that they fall entirely under the same license.
16
Wow, this one is the first I've seen to almost comply with our attribution terms which are linked at the bottom of every single web page we serve up.
Except.. it kind of runs afoul of this:
Visually indicate that the content is from Stack Overflow, Meta Stack Overflow, Server Fault, or Super User in some way. It doesn’t have to be obnoxious; a discreet ...
16
Anything that you post to Stack Overflow will be under the terms of the Creative Commons license. You can find more information by looking at the bottom right of the page and clicking the cc-wiki link.
As far as more specific legal issues, you should probably consult an attorney.
16
From the footer:
"site design and logo is © 2009 stackoverflow.com LLC; user contributed content licensed under cc-wiki with attribution required"
In other words, you own the copyright on the content you have generated, however, you have also granted a licence for it to be used under those terms.
14
If you are talking about taking code from Stack Overflow for use in your work, I would be very careful. Even if it is the opinion of the people here that posts to Stack Overflow are covered by Creative Commons, you will need to be able to prove that you got the code from here.
A Short Story To Illustrate:
Someone else decides the code is a good ...
14
It's probably not the politicians themselves more than it is intense lobbying from Big Media. My position is that major media companies like Viacom are pressuring politicians (with money, perhaps even political or legal threats) to the point where they have essentially no choice but to follow through. We the people are being silenced by Big Media, and they ...
13
Short answer: If you see material that shouldn't be on the site, flag it with a clear explanation of why you think it shouldn't be there. However, don't make a copyright claim in your flag; moderators are not equipped to deal with these.
Copy-Pasted Material
Moderators (and community users) can delete content that has been verifiably copy/pasted from ...
13
What's not offensive about plagarism? Copying from another source, in a way that violates fair-use, is plainly offensive. While I don't know that we need to cite things the same way that one would in a paper, you ought to provide a live link to the reference and somehow indicate that you are quoting the material (use the handy, quoting feature of the ...
11
I use MSDN links all the time, usually like you did along with some relevant text for the specifics of the user's problem. In fact, I just did it yesterday for an accepted answer.
I like getting MSDN links as answers because MSDN is so hard to navigate, it's one of the worst sites to find something in.
I know of no official policy against them. In fact, ...
10
As the moderator who closed the question, it was closed for these reasons:
Borders on being nothing more than a wall of code, which satisfies the "not a real question" criteria
Asks "Also are there any improvements that could be made to these two functions?" which is highly subjective and therefore satisfies the "not constructive" criteria (and as ChrisF ...
10
If you're going to post the whole source which is under a given license, then yes you should ensure that the license is well known to any viewer of the answer. This is not incompatible with the CC-Wiki license.
If you're going to post a snippet or small section--keep in mind I am not a lawyer--then I would believe you are covered under fair use. ...
10
Why would linking to copyrighted materials be illegal or not allowed? It is not copied here is it? Copyright is intended to regulate who can replicate the content, not who can point to it or read it.
If we cannot link to copyrighted materials, how could we ever link to any documentation ever created?
Most of all, it is not up to Stack Overflow / Stack ...
10
If you don't have the rights to post it, don't.
If you do have the rights to post it, attribute it appropriately
If you don't have rights to post it, but it's publicly available (legally) elsewhere, it's okay to link to it — but you should also summarize it and attribute it
10
Just so that you have context for this request, if you're wondering "who the heck is this Herb Sutter guy?"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herb_Sutter
Some sample "Guru of the Week" posts:
http://www.gotw.ca/gotw/009.htm
http://www.gotw.ca/gotw/041.htm
http://www.gotw.ca/gotw/059.htm
http://www.gotw.ca/gotw/073.htm
If these can be roughly made to fit the ...
9
By the way: copying verbatim quotes, even including proper sourcing, is not citing properly, nor is it covered by fair use.
Citing, and fair use, only apply if a quote is used in context, e.g. to illustrate/prove a point (citing a standard document). Although common practice, pasting an answer from a web site or book is not, and never was, covered by fair ...
8
If it's merely possible that your suggestion may infringe copyright, I don't see any problem with it.
If it's definite that your suggestion does infringe copyright, then no, it is not appropriate.
If in your judgment you perceive that your suggestion will most likely be used to infringe copyright, then you may elect to withhold your suggestion. That's a ...
8
Edit:
The following statement is my personal viewpoint only. There seems to be some legal uncertainty as to whether the suggested behaviour would be considered a good thing. I would suggest you read this related answer by Joel and the subsequent comments. Before taking any action based on this discussion. It may be better left alone.
StackOverflow is not ...
Only top voted, non community-wiki answers of a minimum length are eligible

