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by bityard
490 days ago
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> One cannot just declare something is public domain. Of course you can. Lots of people do this. There are whole websites that collect and distribute public domain photos, music, artwork, etc. I'm actually very curious now what led you to the line of thinking that it isn't possible? |
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Depends on the jurisdiction—e.g. Germany[1] is known to be particularly problematic. But in this particular case, the model has been released under CC0[2], which has a fallback permissive license alongside its public domain dedication, specifically to avoid this problem. That’s why the CC0 is a thousand words long instead of a couple of sentences. Most sites hosting “public domain” works also use the CC0 or something similar.
[1] https://opensource.stackexchange.com/q/9871
[2] https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode....