2.4 KiB
title | layout | permalink |
---|---|---|
Non-Software Licenses | default | /non-software/ |
Open source software licenses can be also used for non-software works and are often the best choice, especially when the works in question can be edited and versioned as source (e.g., open source hardware designs). Choose an open source license here.
Data, media, etc.
CC0-1.0, CC-BY-4.0, and CC-BY-SA-4.0 are open licenses used for non-software material ranging from datasets to videos. Note that CC-BY-4.0 and CC-BY-SA-4.0 should not be used for software.
Documentation
Any open source software license or open license for media (see above) also applies to software documentation. If you use different licenses for your software and its documentation, be sure to specify that source code examples in the documentation are also licensed under the software license.
Fonts
The SIL Open Font License 1.1 keeps fonts open, allowing them to be freely used in other works.
Hardware
There are the CERN Open Hardware family of licenses: CERN-OHL-P-2.0, the permissive variant (MIT-like); CERN-OHL-W-2.0, the “weakly reciprocal” variant (MPL-like), and CERN-OHL-S-2.0, the “strongly reciprocal” variant (GPL-like). The CERN OHL family is also applicable to HDL source code and synthesized bitstreams as would be used in FPGAs.
CC-BY-4.0 and CC-BY-SA-4.0 are also commonly used for hardware; however they do not grant patent rights which can restrict usage of patent-encumbered hardware licensed under them and Creative Commons does not recommend them for hardware.
If your hardware has accompanying software then be sure to specify a license for the software portion as well as the hardware portion.
Mixed projects
If your project contains a mix of software and other material, you can include multiple licenses, as long as you are explicit about which license applies to each part of the project. See the license notice for this site as an example.