Hi Gene, It's common for the work to be available in both gratis and for a cost forms. The obvious example is a hardcopy book and an ebook. Sometimes identical content is available gratis and non-gratis - for example, gratis MP3s on Jamendo and those same MP3s for $1 each in the Apple store. But it's not unusual - particularly with software - for it only to be available for cost. The journal *Fantastique Unfettered *is CC BY-SA but only available for a charge.
Unfortunately, another common scenario is for the gratis version to be FLO but the for a cost version to combine FLO and non-FLO content. For example, the print version of *Dungeon World *combines text under CC Attribution with unlicensed images. Cheers, Chris *Chris Sakkas **Admin of the FOSsil Bank wiki <http://fossilbank.wikidot.com/> and the Living Libre blog <http://www.livinglibre.com> and Twitter feed<https://twitter.com/#%21/living_libre> .* On 12 July 2013 08:32, Gene Shackman <[email protected]> wrote: > > Some FLO works are not free of charge? I didn't know that. Is that common? > So they can cost and still be FLO? > > > > ------------------------------ > On Thu, Jul 11, 2013 10:26 PM PDT Chris Sakkas wrote: > > >Hey folks, > > > >I've updated: http://okfnpad.org/UEVd4jV2cB > > > >Including a one-page summary, more discussion about what the free in free > >software/culture means > > _______________________________________________ > okfn-discuss mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.okfn.org/mailman/listinfo/okfn-discuss > Unsubscribe: http://lists.okfn.org/mailman/options/okfn-discuss >
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