The materials developed from the Washington, DC-based nonprofit hold US copyrights but are made publicly available under a Creative Commons (CC) license, which theoretically allows them to be freely ...
Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook Rules covered under the proposed OGL 1.2 include specific classes, spells, and monsters, meaning ...
A company sells a printed or digital product. And give away a simple version of the copy under creative commons, right? Here's how I would interpret it. * A single licensee (teacher, school, etc) ...