"Jeroen Goulooze" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> My first question is: are there more licences like this? I mean copy
> left or semi-copyleft licenses written for creative products?
The FSF's annotated list is at:
http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/license-list.html
Also see:
http://linart.net/info/guide/#resources
> While working on a 3D project there are some specific problems. The end
> product(s) are made from the work of a group of people. Person A invents
> something (a writer), person B makes a drawing, person C makes a model based
> on this drawing, person D makes the animation, person E is responsible for
> editing and video. All these people have ownership of the product being
> made. Is there a license that considers this project/group-based way of
> working?
Probably all of these licenses are useful for group projects,
especially the GPL. Best make sure all contributors agree on licensing
scheme in advance, before a single contribution to the project whole
is made.
> Besides that we want to be able to sell the end product if it is
> commercially viable (and everyone should be getting his share).
You could assign copyright of the work to the company that's selling
it, then have all contributors sign a work-for-hire contract.