Public Domain/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
imported>Martin Baldwin-Edwards m (Public domain/Related Articles moved to Public Domain/Related Articles: wrong case) |
No edit summary |
||
Line 27: | Line 27: | ||
{{r|Patent}} | {{r|Patent}} | ||
{{r|Project Gutenberg}} | {{r|Project Gutenberg}} | ||
==Articles related by keyphrases (Bot populated)== | |||
{{r|Third sector}} | |||
{{r|Hans Mommsen}} | |||
{{r|Equivalence relation}} |
Latest revision as of 11:00, 8 October 2024
- See also changes related to Public Domain, or pages that link to Public Domain or to this page or whose text contains "Public Domain".
Parent topics
- Commons [r]: Please do not use this term in your topic list, because there is no single article for it. Please substitute a more precise term. See Commons (disambiguation) for a list of available, more precise, topics. Please add a new usage if needed.
- Public [r]: Shared by, open or available to everyone, well or generally known, universally available or without limit, done or made on behalf of the community as a whole, open to general or unlimited viewing or disclosure, frequented by large numbers of people or for general use, or places generally open or visible to all pertaining to official matters or maintained at taxpayer expense. [e]
- Copyright [r]: An exclusive property grant on creative works granted to authors of those works for a period set by law. [e]
- Copyleft [r]: The use of traditional copyright and intellectual property law to pursue goals of open sharing and collaboration. [e]
Subtopics
- Berkeley Software Distribution licenses [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Berkeley Software Distribution [r]: Free Unix distribution created by the University of California at Berkeley. [e]
- Circus [r]: Historically, the arena associated with the horse and chariot races and athletic contests known in ancient Rome as the Circensian games. [e]
- Creative Commons licenses [r]: A set of copyright licenses created by Creative Commons. [e]
- CC0 [r]: A Creative Commons license that can be used to waive copyrights, or parts thereof. [e]
- Encyclopaedia Britannica Eleventh Edition [r]: a famous edition, now in the public domain, considered one of the most scholarly general encyclopedias ever compiled [e]
- Fair use [r]: A limitation of United States federal copyright law providing that a greater societal good is achieved when limited material from copyrighted works can be used without prior permission of the copyright holder. [e]
- Freedom of information [r]: Add brief definition or description
- GNU Free Documentation License [r]: A copyleft license for free documentation of software, designed by the Free Software Foundation (FSF) for the GNU project. [e]
- Open access [r]: The free, immediate online access to the results of research, coupled with the right to use those results in new and innovative ways. [e]
- Open access journal [r]: An academic journal that publishes its articles via Open access, i.e. such that the content is free to use and reuse for readers. [e]
- Orphan works [r]: A term used to describe the situation where a copyright owner cannot be identified and/or located by someone who is seeking permission to use the work. [e]
- Panton Principles [r]: A set of recommendations on how to label scientific research data that are made public, with the aim of facilitating reproducibility and reuse. [e]
- Patent [r]: Grant made by a government that confers upon the creator of an invention the sole right to make, use, and sell that invention for a set period of time. [e]
- Project Gutenberg [r]: A massive, fully free online library of books and literature, primarily the full texts of public domain works. [e]
- Third sector [r]: A sector or category of organizations and associations operating outside of government or markets (and, thus, in a third place or space). [e]
- Hans Mommsen [r]: Emeritus Professor of Modern History at the Ruhr University in Bochum; has led the functionalist school of Hitler historiography [e]
- Equivalence relation [r]: A reflexive symmetric transitive binary relation on a set. [e]