I visited CommonsWare's profile and saw this.
Can one do that? Just curious cos from my understanding all code posted here come under Creative Commons license.
I visited CommonsWare's profile and saw this.
Can one do that? Just curious cos from my understanding all code posted here come under Creative Commons license.
Can one do that?
They can, but they can't take away any rights that Stack Overflow's CC-Wiki license agreement gives.
The copyright of the content always remains with the author and they can re-license anything they publish on Stack Overflow any way they choose in parallel to SO.
I once made an infographic illustrating the situation:
I'm not a lawyer, but I'm fairly sure this means they can apply whatever license or terms they want. To be effective, they just have to be more liberal than CC-Wiki.
They can't limit the scope of CC-Wiki willy nilly - or rather, they can, but you can simply ignore it in favour of the CC-Wiki license, to which they have agreed in full the moment they posted the content on SO.
There is, of course, the fact that they don't publish the content in parallel in a place different from SO. They just declare that a different kind of license applies to the content posted here.
I guess in theory, Stack Overflow could try and prohibit that, arguing that it's content published on their platform according to their terms. But I can't see why they would ever want to do that, unless they suddenly turned very, very evil - for which there aren't any signs at the moment, imo.
Yes, one can do that. They are giving you an additional license, so you can pick whatever license fits your needs. Since they are the original author of the content, they have the right to offer that content to you under any license they see fit.
The author is effectively giving you a multiple licenses to choose from.
Note that any re-use and reworking of the content under the CC-Wiki license is not covered under the additional licenses; if I take CommonsWare's work and add to it or alter it, give him attribution under the terms of the CC-Wiki license, then that is a collective work and not his work to license, so only CC-Wiki then applies.
On the surface this looks a bit dodgy, but in reality every single user on stackoverflow should put a similar clause in their profile. This explicitly licences your code snippet for free use by people who see it, which Creative Commons doesn't apparently.