You solve the issue by contacting the authors of the content you need, and negotiate a permission for your use.
What authors can do already is use CC+, meaning they give out a CC license and indicate where and how to gain (usually, purchase) access to additional rights. -- Tarmo Toikkanen [email protected] http://tarmo.fi On Sunday 15. 12 2013 at 10.06, Shrinivasan T wrote: > Friends. > > I have a doubt on the term "non-commercial" > > I seen a digital content with the following license. > http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ > http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/legalcode > > Though the content is shared free of cost with all attributions > digitally online, > I want to print the content as a printed book and share with people. > > Printing as book needs some money and can not give the printed book > for free for all. > So, we need to have some minimum cost as price for the book. > > But, now this become commercial. Hence, can not sell the book as per license. > > How to solve this issue? > > Can we have dual license for print and digital media? > > Is it possible for CC license for digital versions and "All rights > reserved publishers" or something similar for print versions? > > > -- > Regards, > T.Shrinivasan > > > My Life with GNU/Linux : http://goinggnu.wordpress.com > Free E-Magazine on Free Open Source Software in Tamil : http://kaniyam.com > > Get CollabNet Subversion Edge : http://www.collab.net/svnedge > _______________________________________________ > cc-devel mailing list > [email protected] (mailto:[email protected]) > http://lists.ibiblio.org/mailman/listinfo/cc-devel > >
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