On 11/18/2013 04:24 PM, Nick Yeates wrote:
My question is, if I am incorporating it into a work that is considerable larger, do I need to license the entire piece of work as CCSA? The parts from U of Oxford will be, say, 3% of the complete content (derivative work???). Really, most of the content is new/mine.
If it is a derivative, yes. As a CC-BY-SA licensor, I expect the derivative works to be available to recipients with similar rights as CC-BY-SA gave you. It's not a matter of size. Though, there's too little information to know if your work is indeed a derivative work (in CC parlance, an adaptation), or a collection, or other cases such as fair use of the material for specific purposes.
For example, works known as sequels or fan fiction don't necessarily contain even 1% of verbatim copied material, but they are based on the original work, use its characters, are set in its world, refer to its events. They are remixes, many consider them derivative works.
If the original work is under copyright restrictions (the default copyright law), then these works are infringing, and their authors at best tolerated. If the original work is under CC-BY-SA, then works building on it are free to develop. They just should keep offering the same rights to their readers as the original gave them: CC-BY-SA or similar.
IMHO, your best course of action is to ask the author of the work. Note that ShareAlike licenses allow commercial use.
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