Signed License

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These materials are made available under the terms of Creative Commons 0 copyright waiver instead of a “traditional” copyleft license. We the undersigned agree to the following, wherein “this work” refers to “The Peeragogy Handbook” and all other content posted on peeragogy.org or the original collaboratory site, http://socialmediaclassroom.com/host/peeragogy.

I hereby waive all copyright and related or neighboring rights together with all associated claims and causes of action with respect to this work to the extent possible under the law.

Signed:

  • Bryan Alexander
  • Paul Allison
  • Elisa Armendáriz
  • Régis Barondeau
  • Doug Breitbart
  • George Brett
  • Suz Burroughs
  • Joseph Corneli
  • Jay Cross
  • Charles Jeffrey Danoff
  • Julian Elve
  • María Fernanda Arenas
  • James Folkestad
  • John Graves
  • Kathy Gill
  • Matthew Herschler
  • Gigi Johnson
  • Anna Keune
  • Kyle Larson
  • Roland Legrand
  • Amanda Lyons
  • Lisa Snow MacDonald
  • Christopher Tillman Neal
  • Ted Newcomb
  • Stephanie Parker
  • Miguel Ángel Pérez Álvarez
  • Charlotte Pierce
  • David Preston
  • Howard Rheingold
  • Paola Ricaurte
  • Verena Roberts
  • Stephanie Schipper
  • Fabrizio Terzi
  • Geoff Walker

Note that this waiver does not apply to other works by the above authors, including works linked to from peeragogy.org. It also does not apply to embedded content drawn from other sites and included for the reader’s convenience.

Future contributors: Note also that we will require a similar copyright waiver agreement. That said, the waiver also means that you are free to do essentially whatever you like with the content in your own work! Have fun!

How we came to this decision

These Creative Commons license options were proposed by various members of the community:

  • CC Zero - public domain; no restrictions for downstream users
  • CC By-SA - requires downstream users to include attribution and to license their work in the same way
  • CC By-SA-NC - requires downstream users to include attribution, to license their work in the same way and disallows any commercial use of the content

After a brief discussion, no one was in favor of restricting downstream users, so we decided to go with CC0. We agreed that we would get enough “credit” by having our names on peeragogy.org. In connection with this discussion, we agreed that we would work on ways to explicitly build “reusability” into the handbook content.