Page:Creative Commons for Educators and Librarians.pdf/101

- 88 - CHAPTER 4 More Information about Marking Licensed Works
 * “Marking/Creators/Marking Third Party Content,” by Creative Commons. CC BY 4.0.
 * This wiki provides best practices and nuanced information on the marking of third-party content: https://wiki.creativecommons.org/wiki/Marking/Creators/Marking_third_party_content#Additional_explanation_and_tips.

More Information about License Compatibility
 * “Compatible Licenses,” by Creative Commons. CC BY 4.0.
 * This is a page with information on which licenses are compatible, how compatibility works, and where there may not necessarily be compatibility between licenses: https://creativecommons.org/share-your-work/licensing-considerations/compatible-licenses.
 * “Wiki/CC License Compatibility,” by Creative Commons. CC BY 4.0.
 * This page gives more information on the CC license compatibility chart: https://wiki.creativecommons.org/wiki/Wiki/cc_license_compatibility.
 * “License Compatibility,” Wikipedia article. CC BY-SA 3.0.
 * This is Wikipedia’s article on license compatibility, including open licenses that are not CC licenses: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/License_compatibility.

More Scholarship about CC Licenses
 * “Creative Commons Licenses Legal Pitfalls: Incompatibilities and Solutions,” by Melanie Dulong de Rosnay at the Institute for Information Law at the University of Amsterdam and Creative Commons Netherlands. CC BY 3.0 NL.
 * This is a detailed report on the more nuanced and legal aspects of incompatibilities which apply in a variety of international applications: https://www.creativecommons.nl/downloads/101220cc_incompatibilityfinal.pdf.
 * “User-Related Drawbacks of Open Content Licensing,” by Till Kreutzer in Open Content Licensing: From Theory to Practice, edited by Lucie Guibault and Christina Angelopoulos (Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2011). CC BY NC 3.0