@Xtheth : in FireFox you can right-click on the link and select "Save Link As" from the menu that appears. I don't know about other web browsers though.
I'm concerned it may be the output of one of those non-free landscape generation programs where the output comes with extra legal restrictions that prevent usage here on OGA.
Yeah, generating speech is much more difficult than stringing together the sounds of letters. I suggest reading about it on Wikipedia, it is a fascinating and complex topic.
Firstly, we are talking about the original BSD license that has the advertising clause. The modern BSD license does not have that clause and allows linking with the GPL. If you had read the Wikipedia article, you would know this.
Secondly, the Free Software Foundation has stated that they do not consider a GPL'd game program (etc) to be "linking" with the art assets that it uses. Though I don't know whether this has ever been tested in a court of law.
The advertising clause is incompatible because it imposes an extra restriction, and the GPL (at least v2) states that no further restrictions can be placed on the software.
@Xtheth : in FireFox you can right-click on the link and select "Save Link As" from the menu that appears. I don't know about other web browsers though.
Don't the CC licenses let you choose which parts to use?
In this case, you just have CC-SA (share-alike) without the BY (attribution).
That is very nice, but how was it made?
I'm concerned it may be the output of one of those non-free landscape generation programs where the output comes with extra legal restrictions that prevent usage here on OGA.
Small issue: going to the normal "Latest Art" page and the title says "Latest Art of my Friends".
Yeah, generating speech is much more difficult than stringing together the sounds of letters. I suggest reading about it on Wikipedia, it is a fascinating and complex topic.
This site has some GIMP tutorials: http://libregraphicsworld.org
Firstly, we are talking about the original BSD license that has the advertising clause. The modern BSD license does not have that clause and allows linking with the GPL. If you had read the Wikipedia article, you would know this.
Secondly, the Free Software Foundation has stated that they do not consider a GPL'd game program (etc) to be "linking" with the art assets that it uses. Though I don't know whether this has ever been tested in a court of law.
The advertising clause is incompatible because it imposes an extra restriction, and the GPL (at least v2) states that no further restrictions can be placed on the software.
See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BSD_license
This might be usable for left/right directions, but lacks all the rotations a DOOM sprite would need:
http://opengameart.org/content/lpc-wolf-animation
Here is a rottweiler model which could be rendered in the 5 (or 8) rotations and animations needed to replace the wolfenstein dog:
http://opengameart.org/content/benny-the-rottweiler
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