The most relevant part of what surt said should not be left out; "it's not really public domain."
Any time you add extra stipulations to a license, it is no longer that license.
"This is licensed CC-BY. just give me credit. but also, don't resell it"
Well, not really CC-BY any more, is it?
"GPL: if it's used with other art, that other art must also be GPL, but only if you're using it commercially"
Well, not really GPL any more, is it?
"Public Domain: Do whatever you want with it, but only within the United States"
Well, not really Public Domain anymore, is it?
For your own personal uses, I think bzt's assessment is fairly solid. However, since the question is 'what does this mean for OGA?', mmmnot quite as safe: Yes, I know, PD is more like the absence of copyright than it is a copyright license, but the underlying effect is, if it isn't one of the licenses we accept on OGA, and it can't be converted to one of those same licenses, then we can't host it here. Note that I'm not saying "we cannot host Technopheasant's FPS pistols". I'm saying "I am not sure if derivatives of 'Public Domain US Military' can be licensed as CC0 or not." It's possible the answer is "yeah, that's totally fine" but I'm not sure. That's the part we need more information on.
Until we have that additional clarification, I must mark those derivatives as having a licensing issue. Because they may not be safe to use outside the US, and that is not something we expect any of our users to govern.
Thanks for sharing. It looks like you have several pixelart assets that go well together. Would you be willing to submit these related assets as one submission? Cohesive sets of assets are easier to find and tend to get more downloads and favorites than several separate submissions with just a few assets each.
@bzt, please don't say stuff like "not possible" when it is not only possible, but easy. Is it possible to have the file saved as monochrome palette? no, probably not, but that isn't what Gaymoo was asking, nor are the files currently stored as an actual monochrome palette anyway. The sprites themselves are still monochrome even if the file's palette wouldn't be. An indexed palette with 1-bit transparency works just fine. The attached is less than half the file size of the original. If gaymoo mentions an interest in the intricacies of marginal gains in storage space and load times of overly-complicated image handling in game engines, then we can discuss more, but otherwise that kind of stuff is off-topic on this thread.
@Gaymoo: eh, for almost any other color set, it may be more useful to have a transparent background, but for black and white assets like these? It is trivial to just select all white (or black?) pixels and convert to transparent, so I would say nah, no need to submit a transparent version. The developer who wants to use it can do that if they need it. It certainly doesn't make it less useful if you choose to do so, though. More variety of useful forms is always better than less. :)
True. I'm glad you were able to track it down, otherwise we wouldn't have been able to host it at all. This fits the art challenge theme that starts tomorrow. I wonder if it would still be eligible! That would be cool.
That photo isn't public domain. It's CC-BY. Easy to fix though; just change the license to match and add the last two lines to the copyright/attribution notice field.
This thread will be closed for 48 hours in an effort to mitigate increasing toxicity levels.
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The most relevant part of what surt said should not be left out; "it's not really public domain."
Any time you add extra stipulations to a license, it is no longer that license.
Well, not really CC-BY any more, is it?
Well, not really GPL any more, is it?
Well, not really Public Domain anymore, is it?
For your own personal uses, I think bzt's assessment is fairly solid. However, since the question is 'what does this mean for OGA?', mmmnot quite as safe: Yes, I know, PD is more like the absence of copyright than it is a copyright license, but the underlying effect is, if it isn't one of the licenses we accept on OGA, and it can't be converted to one of those same licenses, then we can't host it here. Note that I'm not saying "we cannot host Technopheasant's FPS pistols". I'm saying "I am not sure if derivatives of 'Public Domain US Military' can be licensed as CC0 or not." It's possible the answer is "yeah, that's totally fine" but I'm not sure. That's the part we need more information on.
Until we have that additional clarification, I must mark those derivatives as having a licensing issue. Because they may not be safe to use outside the US, and that is not something we expect any of our users to govern.
Thanks for sharing. It looks like you have several pixelart assets that go well together. Would you be willing to submit these related assets as one submission? Cohesive sets of assets are easier to find and tend to get more downloads and favorites than several separate submissions with just a few assets each.@bzt, please don't say stuff like "not possible" when it is not only possible, but easy. Is it possible to have the file saved as monochrome palette? no, probably not, but that isn't what Gaymoo was asking, nor are the files currently stored as an actual monochrome palette anyway. The sprites themselves are still monochrome even if the file's palette wouldn't be. An indexed palette with 1-bit transparency works just fine. The attached is less than half the file size of the original. If gaymoo mentions an interest in the intricacies of marginal gains in storage space and load times of overly-complicated image handling in game engines, then we can discuss more, but otherwise that kind of stuff is off-topic on this thread.
@Gaymoo: eh, for almost any other color set, it may be more useful to have a transparent background, but for black and white assets like these? It is trivial to just select all white (or black?) pixels and convert to transparent, so I would say nah, no need to submit a transparent version. The developer who wants to use it can do that if they need it. It certainly doesn't make it less useful if you choose to do so, though. More variety of useful forms is always better than less. :)
Oh, I'm sorry. Woops, yes that's a bit too early for the fall challenge. Still, cool assets. Thanks for sharing them.
True. I'm glad you were able to track it down, otherwise we wouldn't have been able to host it at all. This fits the art challenge theme that starts tomorrow. I wonder if it would still be eligible! That would be cool.
That photo isn't public domain. It's CC-BY. Easy to fix though; just change the license to match and add the last two lines to the copyright/attribution notice field.EDIT: Fixed, thanks! :)
Nice work.
This thread will be closed for 48 hours in an effort to mitigate increasing toxicity levels.
Anyone is welcome to discuss this with me via PM without risk of repercussions, but arguing elsewhere about the thread-lock or starting a new thread about this same topic will result in an account suspension.
Ah, I see! "Inter Governmental Oranization". Interesting. Good find, marko. Thanks.
I'm curious what that is. Do you have a link to the page where it mentions CC-BY-SA 3.0-IGO?
Yep! As long as you're getting the images from https://esahubble.org/images/ they're all CC-BY 4! :D
Some of the Credit: text is kind of long, depending on the image. Just be sure to include the full text of it.
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