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I feel strongly that edit #2 make this post more confusing by breaking the flow of ideas at a key point. if you disagree, revert; I won't edit again!
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senderle
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The claim is utter nonsense. The Creative Commons license under which users submit their content to SO grants SO permission to redistribute their content.

Article 4(a) of The Creative Commons license begins thusly:

You may Distribute or Publicly Perform the Work...

Emphasis mine. Not must. May.

The license under which users submit their content to SO grants SO permission to redistribute their content. It does not force SO to redistribute their content forever - if SO wants to stop distributing their content (e.g. by closing and deleting a question), that is in no way a violation of the CC license.

The claim is utter nonsense. The Creative Commons license under which users submit their content to SO grants SO permission to redistribute their content.

Article 4(a) begins thusly:

You may Distribute or Publicly Perform the Work...

Emphasis mine. Not must. May.

It does not force SO to redistribute their content forever - if SO wants to stop distributing their content (e.g. by closing and deleting a question), that is in no way a violation of the CC license.

The claim is utter nonsense.

Article 4(a) of The Creative Commons license begins thusly:

You may Distribute or Publicly Perform the Work...

Emphasis mine. Not must. May.

The license under which users submit their content to SO grants SO permission to redistribute their content. It does not force SO to redistribute their content forever - if SO wants to stop distributing their content (e.g. by closing and deleting a question), that is in no way a violation of the CC license.

Added link to license, clarified section.
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user456814
user456814

The claim is utter nonsense. The Creative Commons licenseThe Creative Commons license under which users submit their content to SO grants SO permission to redistribute their content.

Article 4(a) begins thusly:

You may Distribute or Publicly Perform the Work...

Emphasis mine. Not must. May.

It does not force SO to redistribute their content forever - if SO wants to stop distributing their content (e.g. by closing and deleting a question), that is in no way a violation of the CC license.

The claim is utter nonsense. The Creative Commons license under which users submit their content to SO grants SO permission to redistribute their content.

Article 4 begins thusly:

You may Distribute or Publicly Perform the Work...

Emphasis mine. Not must. May.

It does not force SO to redistribute their content forever - if SO wants to stop distributing their content (e.g. by closing and deleting a question), that is in no way a violation of the CC license.

The claim is utter nonsense. The Creative Commons license under which users submit their content to SO grants SO permission to redistribute their content.

Article 4(a) begins thusly:

You may Distribute or Publicly Perform the Work...

Emphasis mine. Not must. May.

It does not force SO to redistribute their content forever - if SO wants to stop distributing their content (e.g. by closing and deleting a question), that is in no way a violation of the CC license.

added 154 characters in body
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Jaydles StaffMod
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The claim is utter nonsense. The Creative Commons license under which users submit their content to SO grants SO permission to redistribute their content.

Article 4 begins thusly:

You may Distribute or Publicly Perform the Work...

Emphasis mine. Not must. May.

It does not force SO to redistribute their content forever - if SO wants to stop distributing their content (e.g. by closing and deleting a question), that is in no way a violation of the CC license.

The claim is utter nonsense. The Creative Commons license under which users submit their content to SO grants SO permission to redistribute their content. It does not force SO to redistribute their content forever - if SO wants to stop distributing their content (e.g. by closing and deleting a question), that is in no way a violation of the CC license.

The claim is utter nonsense. The Creative Commons license under which users submit their content to SO grants SO permission to redistribute their content.

Article 4 begins thusly:

You may Distribute or Publicly Perform the Work...

Emphasis mine. Not must. May.

It does not force SO to redistribute their content forever - if SO wants to stop distributing their content (e.g. by closing and deleting a question), that is in no way a violation of the CC license.

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nobody
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