104
votes
Accepted
Do GDPR's protections on "personal information" entitle users to vandalise/remove their own posts?
No.
GDPR is about the control of your personal information - assuming that you are an EU or UK* citizen, what you post in questions and answers should not be personal information. If you have posted ...
ChrisFMod
- 137k
85
votes
Where is the opt out option so my answers don't get used by OpenAI?
Short-answer, you can't.
The longer answer is mostly in the comments, but the core issue is that:
Questions and Answers you've posted are not personal data as defined by the GDPR.
When you posted ...
70
votes
Can I copy/paste some of my answers to a blog?
Since you are presumably the owner of that content, there is no need to mention SO, or that you also posted it there. Such a citation would only be necessary for someone other than the owner.
If you ...
57
votes
What should I do when there is a license text in code from an answer?
There's a lot of confusion here, and it's causing far more problems than are necessary.
Disclaimer: I'm not a lawyer. Don't interpret this as legal advice.
If you are the sole author of something, ...
36
votes
Stack Overflow is no longer providing Creative Commons Data Dumps
So on my tirade against AI on Meta Stack Exchange, I did a little extra digging around about what was and wasn't kosher with respect to LLM training.
In short, IANAL but I don't think that the CEO's ...
29
votes
Is removing a deleted user's name from their posts compatible with CC-BY-SA 4.0?
Deletion
User deletion is irreversible! By sending this request, your votes will be revoked, and all of your content will be made anonymous.
Like the help says (and the privacy policy and also the ...
26
votes
Accepted
Does a link to Stack Overflow in an open source library mean that that library must be copyleft?
I am not a lawyer.
I am, however, an open source library maintainer who takes care to avoid licensing issues.
To address the question title, "Does a link to Stack Overflow in an open source ...
25
votes
Are OpenAI answers under CC BY-SA?
At least in the US, IMO, yes. The output of AI generation cannot be copyrighted, because it's not the work of a human.1 Thus, all such AI generation output is in the public domain, which means that ...
MakyenMod
- 33.1k
23
votes
The license of code on Stack Overflow
According to Stack Overflow TOS section 6 code posted on Stack Overflow falls under CC-BY-SA, now CC BY-SA 4.0 (International) (was CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported according to this related question and this ...
23
votes
Deleting account with all content
When you posted the content to SO you irrevocably licenced the content under the Creative Commons Wiki licence, giving everyone in the world the right to publish the content, or created derived works ...
22
votes
Can I copy/paste some of my answers to a blog?
I saw none of the answers referenced the relevant legal texts yet, so I decided to write my own.
Yes.
Firstly, you would be allowed to copy the answers to your blog even if they weren't yours.
As ...
22
votes
Do GDPR's protections on "personal information" entitle users to vandalise/remove their own posts?
No, it doesn't entitle users to remove their posts.
Note however, that some information attached to their post may be subject to removal via the GDPR.
For example, their username, the date/time when ...
21
votes
Any recourse for answers put in commercial publication without credit?
I agree with many comments, in particular those of Mark Rotteveel and tripleee.
No, there should not be a recourse through Stack Overflow, because the infringement occurred outside of Stack Overflow. ...
21
votes
Stack Overflow is no longer providing Creative Commons Data Dumps
The same concern was brought up on the network-wide Meta site: June 2023 Data Dump is missing. Although I have answered there, I have also copied my answer here for maximum visibility:
Much has been ...
20
votes
Feature Request: Automatic insertion of license header for code blocks
The vast majority of people don't use anything like this, so I don't see the point. Before you linked to it, I don't think I'd ever seen any example of someone doing this. In fact, your search returns ...
20
votes
Does a link to Stack Overflow in an open source library mean that that library must be copyleft?
[] states that the mere presence of a single URL to a Stack Overflow article in a code comment section makes the entire source code copyleft
The OP uses the Magic Word "Lawyer" to backup ...
20
votes
Accepted
Are SO users legally entitled to any benefits from the SE-OpenAI deal?
Are SO users legally entitled to any benefits from the SE-OpenAI deal?
No, they aren't.
does the license we grant SE mean that they can profit exclusively from facilitating/enhancing access to that ...
18
votes
How will Article 13 (EU) impact content on the Stack Exchange network?
Meh, I work at a HQ of a large multinational company that is in EU. It has been a topic here. The thing is: these politicians are not aware about the technological feasibility of enforcing these new ...
18
votes
What do we do when we cannot post code due to licensing issues?
I mean, won't it functionally still be the same?
It'd still function the same, but it wouldn't be their code.
If, for example, you're having trouble getting a button's text to change for a government ...
16
votes
Accepted
Can I copy/paste some of my answers to a blog?
It’s your answer, and you are the only author?
You may post it. No attribution required.
It’s your answer, and other users edited it?
If the edits were minor, you may post it without attribution. But ...
16
votes
Accepted
Self-Promotion or Manipulating SO License?
To answer your specific licensing question without touching on the self-promotion policy:
If I post to my site my code, then share the answer w/ SO linking to my site, do I not retain the rights to ...
Ryan MMod
- 19.8k
15
votes
Request for official policy of implementation of section (4)(c)(iii) of CC BY-SA 3.0 regarding comments
To the best of my knowledge, SO has never announced an official policy requiring the specific practices described in the question. Nor, to the best of my knowledge, has SO announced any other ...
15
votes
Accepted
Can I use Stack Overflow's CSS?
I think what you're looking for here is provided under Stacks, Stack Exchange's in-house design system, that they've released publicly on GitHub under an MIT license.
There's a badge component that ...
14
votes
Should Stack Overflow implement automated link attribution on copy/paste?
No thanks, that would be a massive nuisance.
You'd have to remove the link every time you copy something to your code, an answer or wherever.
Frankly, I find sites doing something like that to be ...
14
votes
Does the CC license of Stack Overflow content mean that the OpenAI model will also have to be CC licensed?
In the United States, there is ongoing litigation regarding using copyrighted materials for training models. Until those cases are resolved, there's no definitive answer. It's worth acknowledging that ...
13
votes
Self-Promotion or Manipulating SO License?
TL;DR the link needed to go.
It started by a comment thread that was flagged for deletion.
Reading the answer above, it appears that your username and the name of the site linked last (out of the blue)...
13
votes
Can code posted on Stack Overflow be used on closed-source software?
I am not a lawyer
There is no real plausible reason to need to copy/paste, and then use, large pieces of code verbatim from Stack Overflow. Most of it is example code that applies to what is supposed ...
13
votes
Can I copy/paste some of my answers to a blog?
I think Servy's analysis here is excellent with regards to content ownership and licensing.
One aspect to consider though, is that including a link to Stack Overflow only serves to give you more ...
13
votes
How will Article 13 (EU) impact content on the Stack Exchange network?
This seems quite alarmist...
From the BBC article you linked, the summation of the article is as thus.
Article 13 says content-sharing services must license
copyright-protected material from the ...
12
votes
Is asking questions on Stack Overflow considered open-source?
Not exactly, but it's not wholly dissimilar either.
From what I understand, the typical reasons in the US to forbid open source contributing include:
potential problems with trade secrets (the ...
Only top scored, non community-wiki answers of a minimum length are eligible
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