Can I post or otherwise use SO questions and answers answers in a personal blog?
3 Answers
Yes, as all content posted to Stack Overflow (or indeed any Stack Exchange site) is under the cc-by-sa licence.
For other people's questions and answers, you can use them as long as you preserve the attribution (who wrote it and when) and include a link back to the original question/answer on Stack Overflow.
As for your own questions and answers, you own the content so you can do with it what you will on other sites. It would be best to include an "attribution" link back to the question/answer on Stack Overflow, however this is not an absolute requirement in this case.
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17Do you still own the content after other users have made edits? Or is attribution mandatory in that case? Commented Jul 28, 2014 at 12:39
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67@Stijn, as I understand the original content is your own, others can build on it per cc-by-sa and the result is a derivative work of the original. Now fetch me five lawyers and we can discuss derivative work. Commented Jul 28, 2014 at 12:43
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7"It would be best to include an "attribution" link back to the question/answer on Stack Overflow." "Best" as in nicest and most welcomed, or "best" as in best legal interest? It sounds pretty vague.– luk32Commented Jul 28, 2014 at 14:18
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7@luk32 - nicest and most welcomed. This is the OP's own content, they can do with it what they want.– ChrisF ModCommented Jul 28, 2014 at 14:19
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1@FrédéricHamidi: Aye, we all want to know, precise to the bit, at which point enough others did enough work to create a derivative work with its own copyright protection... ;-) Commented Jul 28, 2014 at 15:03
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4@Deduplicator I'd say it becomes a derivative work as soon as another user contributes to it. (The new revision is, anyhow - the original revision is still the author's.)– MichelleCommented Jul 28, 2014 at 19:23
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6@Michelle: Actually, it does not. Whether a new revision is a new though derived work itself, that's where you need to consult a lawyer; it depends on the original work, and how much it was changed (as well as who has the better lawyer, and in which court you ask). Commented Jul 28, 2014 at 20:10
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3@Deduplicator Okay, I'd say to be safe, assuming you're not actively looking to avoid linking back and attributing for revisions that have been edited, someone who doesn't have money to blow on a lawyer could err on the side of caution and assume any revision that has been edited by another user is a derivative work and act accordingly. Happy? :P– MichelleCommented Jul 28, 2014 at 20:13
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Why wouldn't you give an attribution link back to the question?– Mike D.Commented Jul 29, 2014 at 8:50
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1@MikeD. For your own content you don't have to, but I agree it would daft not to - after all there's badges for publicising questions elsewhere.– ChrisF ModCommented Jul 29, 2014 at 8:52
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Its also worth mentioning (as per the terms of the cc-by-sa license) that any modifications you make have to be released under the same license. This is the "sa" part of the license. Also you are supposed to include a link to the licence so that your website visitors know the terms for their own use of the material.– rdansCommented Jul 29, 2014 at 13:33
Can I post/use my/others SO questions/answers in my personal blogs?
Yes, you can. The copyright is still yours, you are just licensing the content to Stack Exchange.
If you post answers/questions by other users, you must link back to the post and include details of the OP.
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1would it be mandatory to attribute or is it just a
suggestion
? Commented Jul 29, 2014 at 3:13 -
5@user13107 - part of our licensing (see the footer), includes the attribution requirement. That means, that for content that you did not produce yourself, yes, it is mandatory. Why wouldn't you want to give back attribution to the people who created the original content? Commented Jul 29, 2014 at 8:07
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@Oded the same way SO adds nofollow to linked and quoted sources, maybe? Commented Jul 29, 2014 at 8:54
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4@Matsemann - you seem to conflate nofollow with attribution. Commented Jul 29, 2014 at 8:56
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I’ve changed “should” to “must” in the answer to avoid confusion.– bdeshamCommented Jul 30, 2014 at 18:37
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1@user13107 you should always attribute others work even if the license allows you to use without attribution Commented Jul 31, 2014 at 5:58
If they are solely your then you can post them anywhere but if the content is posted by other users you should take a look at below points.
- In the event that You post or otherwise use Subscriber Content outside of the Network or Services, with the exception of content entirely created by You, You agree that You will follow the attribution rules of the Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike license as follows:
- You will ensure that any such use of Subscriber Content visually displays or otherwise indicates the source of the Subscriber Content as coming from the Stack Exchange Network. This requirement is satisfied with a discreet text blurb, or some other unobtrusive but clear visual indication.
- You will ensure that any such Internet use of Subscriber Content includes a hyperlink directly to the original question on the source site on the Network (e.g., https://stackoverflow.com/questions/12345)
- You will ensure that any such use of Subscriber Content visually display or otherwise clearly indicate the author names for every question and answer so used. You will ensure that any such Internet use of Subscriber Content Hyperlink each author name directly back to his or her user profile page on the source site on the Network (e.g., https://stackoverflow.com/users/12345/username), directly to the Stack Exchange domain, in standard HTML (i.e. not through a Tinyurl or other such indirect hyperlink, form of obfuscation or redirection), without any “nofollow” command or any other such means of avoiding detection by search engines, and visible even with JavaScript disabled.
For more clarification feel free to visit the https://stackexchange.com/legal page
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button and a badge for sharing a link to a post that was visited by x unique IPs, I think yes...