------------------------------------------------
DEFINITIONS
The work of art:
A communal work which includes the initial oeuvre as well as all subsequent
contributions (subsequent originals and copies). It is created at
the initiative of the original artist who, by this license, defines
the conditions according to which the contributions are made.
The original work of art:
This is the oeuvre created by the initiator of the communal work,
of which copies will be modified by whosoever wishes.
Subsequent works:
These are the additions put forward by the artists who contribute
to the formation of the work by taking advantage of the right to reproduction,
distribution and modification that this license confers on them.
The Original (the work's source or resource):
A dated example of the work, of its definition, of its partition or
of its program which the originator provides as the reference for
all future updatings, interpretations, copies or reproductions.
Copy:
Any reproduction of an original as defined by this license.
Authors and artists of the initial work of art:
This is the person who created the work which is at the heart of the
ramifications of this modified work of art. By this license, the author
determines the conditions under which these modifications are made.
Contributor:
Any person who contributes to the creation of the work of art. He
is the authors and artists of an original art object resulting from the modification
of a copy of the initial oeuvre or the modification of a copy of a
subsequent work of art.
------------------------------------------------
1. AIMS
The aim of this license is to define the conditions according to which
you can use this work freely.
2. EXTENT OF THE USAGE
This work of art is subject to copyright, and the author, by this
license, specifies the extent to which you can copy, distribute and
modify it.
2.1 FREEDOM TO COPY (OR OF REPRODUCTION)
You have the right to copy this work of art for your personal use,
for your friends or for any other person, by employing whatever technique
you choose.
2.2 FREEDOM TO DISTRIBUTE, TO INTERPRET (OR OF REPRESENTATION)
You can freely distribute the copies of these works, modified or not,
whatever their medium, wherever you wish, for a fee or for free, if
you observe all the following conditions: - attach this license, in
its entirety, to the copies or indicate precisely where the license
can be found, - specify to the recipient the name of the author of
the originals, - specify to the recipient where he will be able to
access the originals (initial and subsequent). The author of the original
may, if he wishes, give you the right to broadcast/distribute the
original under the same conditions as the copies.
2.3 FREEDOM TO MODIFY
You have the right to modify the copies of the originals (initial
and subsequent), partially or otherwise, respecting the conditions
set out in article 2.2 , in the event of distribution (or representation)
of the modified copy. The author of the original may, if he wishes,
give you the right to modify the original under the same conditions
as the copies.
3. INCORPORATION OF ARTWORK
All the elements of this work of art must remain free, which is why
you are not allowed to integrate the originals into another work which
would not be subject to this license.
4. YOUR AUTHOR'S RIGHTS
The object of this license is not to deny your author's rights on
your contribution. By choosing to contribute to the evolution of this
work of art, you only agree to give to others the same rights with
regard to your contribution as those which were granted to you by
this license.
5. DURATION OF THE LICENCE
This license takes effect as of your acceptance of its provisions.
The fact of copying, distributing, or of modifying the work constitutes
a tacit agreement. This license will remain in force for as long as
the copyright which is attached to the work of art. If you do not
respect the terms of this license, you automatically lose the rights
that it confers. If the legal status to which you are subject makes
it impossible for you to respect the terms of this license, you may
not make use of the rights which it confers.
6. VARIOUS VERSIONS OF THE LICENCE
This license may undergo periodic modifications to incorporate improvements
by its authors (instigators of the "copyleft attitude" movement) by
way of new, numbered versions. You will have the choice of accepting
the provisions contained in the version under which the copy was communicated
to you, or alternatively, to use the provisions of one of the subsequent
versions.
7. SUB-licensing
Sub-licenses are not authorized by the present license. Any person
who wishes to make use of the rights that it confers will be directly
bound to the author of the original work.
8. THE LAW APPLICABLE TO THIS CONTRACT
This license is subject to French law.
------------------------------------------------
DIRECTIONS
FOR USE:
- How to use the Free Art license?
To benefit from the Free Art License, it is enough to specify
the following on your work of art:
[- A few lines to indicate the name of the work and to give an idea
of what it is.] [- A few lines to describe, if necessary, the modified
work of art and give the name of the author/artist.]
Copyright ɠ[the date] [name of the author or artists] (if appropriate,
specify the names of the previous authors and artists)
Copyleft: this work of art is free, you can redistribute it and/or
modify it according to terms of the Free Art license. You will find
a specimen of this license on the site Copyleft Attitude http://artlibre.org/news/
as well as on other sites.
- Why use the Free Art license?
1 / to give the greatest number of people access to your work.
2 / to allow it to be freely distributed.
3 / to allow it to evolve by authorising its transformation by others.
4 / to be able, yourself, to use the resources of a work when it is
under Free Art license: to copy, distribute or transform it freely.
5 / This is not all: because the use of the Free Art License is also
a good way to take liberties with the marketing system generated by
the dominant economy. The Free Art License offers a useful legal protocol
to prevent abusive appropriation. It will no longer be possible for
someone to appropriate your work, short-circuiting the creative process
to make personal profit from it. Helping yourself to a collective
work in progress will be forbidden, as will monopolising the resources
of an evolving creation for the benefit of a few.
The Free Art License advocates an economy appropriate for art, based
on sharing, exchange and joyful giving. What counts in art is also
and mostly what is not counted.
- When to use the Free Art License ?
It is not the goal of the Free Art License to eliminate copyright
or author's rights. Quite the opposite, it is about reformulating
the relevance of these rights while taking today's environment into
account. It is about the right to freedom of movement, to free copying
and to free transformation of works of art. The right to work in freedom
for art and artists.
1 / Each time you want to use or put this right into practice, use
the Free Art License.
2 / Each time you want to create works which can evolve and be freely
copied, freely distributed and freely transformed: use the Free Art
License.
3 / Each time you want to have the possibility of copying, distributing
or transforming a work: check that it is under Free Art License. If
it is not, you are liable to be breaking the law.
- To which types of art can the Free Art License be applied?
This license can be applied to digital as well as to non-digital art.
It was born out of observation of the world of free software and the
Internet, but its applicability is not limited to the digital media.
You can put a painting, a novel, a sculpture, a drawing, a piece of
music, a poem, an installation, a video, a film, a recipe, a CD-rom,
a Web site, or a performance under the Free Art License, in short
any creation which has some claim to be a work of art.
- This license has a history:
it was born at the meeting " Copyleft Attitude " http://artlibre.org/news/
which took place at "Acc鳠Local" and "Public" in Paris at the beginning
of the year 2000. For the first time, it brought computer specialists
and freeware activists together with contemporary artists and members
of the art world.
Translation : Antoine Schmitt, Tina Horne.