Alarm Siren wrote:
If you want to go down the public domain route, I direct you to the
CC0 license. This is superior to simply stating that you put it in the public domain, because in many jurisdictions that isn't actually something you can do. The CC0 license works by putting it in the public domain if possible, but if not offers a license to the user that grants effectively the same rights as being in public domain. It also disclaims warranties and thus gives you some measure of protection against potential disgruntled users.
I will have to think about this. I'm happy that "creative commons" does stuff like this, but I'm even opposed to organizations making claims one way or the other. I have extremely radical views on copyright/licensing.
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For the actual PCB, if you're using KiCad, it has suitable silkscreen symbols built-in. You can go to the "Symbol" library and find them in there. As you have lots of space and want to go public domain, I would recommend the "Symbol_CreativeCommonsPublicDomain_SilkScreenTop_Small" symbol. The "Open Source Hardware" symbols are also in there, in a variety of sizes. As you want it to be open source then a github link (or equivalent) is obviously also a must, otherwise how will they find the source files?
I haven't put the "open hardware" logo on there because I don't want it to be attached to yet another license of some kind. It most certainly is open! But I just don't know enough about it yet, will be reading more soon.
As for that particular logo, it looks really crummy, so I found a "public domain" logo from Wikipedia and slapped it on there just now.
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However, a word of caution first: putting out under the CC0/Public Domain really does mean you lose all control over it, forever. Users of your work don't even have to credit you. If you're OK with that then go for it, but personally I usually use CC-BY-SA. That way at least my original work gets some exposure via attribution, and users of derived works are guaranteed the same rights.
Thank you for the word of caution. I really really do not like attribution requirements at all. Again, I'm super extreme, I admit it. I will generally/always give credit to whoever created the public domain stuff in the first place, but I do that because I appreciate their putting it in the public domain in the first place.
I put my name, the year, and "public domain" in ASCII in my ROM code as well just now. Might as well. I plan on putting all of this on github eventually when I finally decide to get it printed.
Thank you for the info. I'll be thinking it over a bit more, particularly the CC0 stuff.
Chad