• 6xpipe_
    link
    English
    121 year ago

    You’re supposed to do that anyway. Code on SO is licensed as CC BY-SA, which requires attribution.

      • 6xpipe_
        link
        71 year ago

        The links from that post and top comment point out that that initiative was dropped. It got mired down in bikeshedding from hundreds of opinions and SO eventually just said, “Fuck it.”

        The MIT announcement thread was edited with the cancellation announcment:

        Update: January 15, 2016

        Thank you for your patience and feedback. The changes proposed here have been delayed indefinitely - we’ll be back later to open some more discussions.

        The top comment from your link points out the current license:

        TL;DR: Source code on SO is still licensed under CC-BY-SA.

        And CC BY-SA is the only license listed on the official help page.

        • Content contributed before 2011-04-08 (UTC) is distributed under the terms of CC BY-SA 2.5.
        • Content contributed from 2011-04-08 up to but not including 2018-05-02 (UTC) is distributed under the terms of CC BY-SA 3.0.
        • Content contributed on or after 2018-05-02 (UTC) is distributed under the terms of CC BY-SA 4.0.
    • Johanno
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      fedilink
      31 year ago

      I used to do that on complete copy and paste parts.

      Now we aren’t allowed to do so. If stackoverflow.com is used you have to adjust the answer so that in court your code will not be a copy. They are afraid of users licenseing their code afterward.