Creative Commons is a non-profit organization.
We need your support to continue providing these
tools.
Donate today!
Bahasa Indonesia Bahasa Malaysia Castellano (España) Català Dansk Deutsch English Español Esperanto Euskara français Frysk Galego hrvatski Italiano Latviski Lietuvių Magyar Nederlands norsk polski Português Português (BR) română Slovenščina srpski (latinica) suomeksi svenska Türkçe Íslenska čeština Ελληνικά Беларуская русский українська العربية پارسی বাংলা 中文 日本語 華語 (台灣) 한국어
The most recent license version is 4.0, which can be used internationally. If you are searching for a port of the license for a particular jurisdiction, however, you may still use them.
If your jurisdiction is not on this list, or if you want to use the latest version of the licenses instead of a ported license, you can return to the 4.0 license chooser.
The most recent license version is 4.0, which can be used internationally. Earlier versions of licenses, including 3.0 international and ports localized to particular jurisdictions, can be still be used by clicking the "show earlier licenses" link below.
Yes
The licensor permits others to copy, distribute, display, and perform the work, as well as make and distribute derivative works based on it.
Yes, as long as others share alike
The licensor permits others to create and distribute derivative works, but only under the same or a compatible license.
No
The licensor permits others to copy, distribute, display, and perform the work, but not distribute derivative works based on it.
Yes
The licensor permits others to copy, distribute, display, and perform the work, including for commercial purposes.
No
The licensor permits others to copy, distribute, display, and perform the work for non-commercial purposes only.
The "Selected License" panel displays information about the license that was described in the "License Features" panel. Changing the values in the "License Features" panel will update the information displayed here.
Approved for Free Cultural Works
If the selected license provides the freedoms required of a free culture license, then the "Approved for Free Cultural Works" icon appears on this panel. This feature is intended to assist you in making a more informed decision. NonCommercial and NoDerivatives licenses include additional restrictions which, by definition, prevent them from being considered free culture licenses.
While our non-free culture licenses are useful in particular circumstances, unintended consequences may result from their use (such as license incompatibility). For example, a work that is under the license "Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike" may not be combined with a work licensed "Attribution-ShareAlike" because putting the resulting work under either license violates the other by either adding or removing the NonCommercial restriction.
A real world example of license incompatibility: Works with the NonCommercial or the NoDerivatives restriction may not be posted to Wikipedia.
Freedomdefined.org is a great source of information about free culture. The free culture definition and permissible restrictions pages are wonderful starting points for further learning.
This information is embedded in a machine-readable format. This allows search engines to index additional information about your work and allows people coming to the license deed from your page to see information about how to attribute your work.
More information on Creative Commons metadata is available.
The "License Mark" select box determines the content of the bottom right panel. That panel provides a means of marking your work in a consistent and standardized way.
HTML + RDFa
HTML is provided that you can copy into your webpage. The HTML is annotated with machine-readable metadata. This allows search engines to find similarly licensed works, and for tools to automatically recognize information about the work (such as who authored it).
XMP
An XMP file can be embedded in a variety of file formats, such as PDFs.
Offline
Provides a simple plain text notice that can be used to mark offline works
The HTML provided in this panel may be pasted into your website to display which license applies to your work, as well as attribution information. The HTML combines information provided in the "License Features" panel and the "Help others attribute you!" panel. The HTML also contains RDFa metadata, which allows search engines to accurately determine which license your work is under, and how you want to be attributed.
This panel also contains a preview of what the HTML will look like when included in your website. The radio buttons at the bottom of the panel may be used to change the size and appearance of the license icon in the HTML.