License and citation

In this module you will learn about Open Source, and how to share your software with and appropriate license, as well as how to share information on citation for your project. 

Learning outcomes

After this module you should be able to:

  • share properly a project

Open source workshop materials

Open Source model accelerates discovery: the more open work is, the more widely it is cited and re-used. However, people who want to work this way need to make some decisions about what exactly “open” means and how to do it.

Learning outcomes

Explain the Open Source concept

Open source workshop materials

10507

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Licensing

When a repository with source code, a manuscript or other creative works becomes public, it should include a file LICENSE or LICENSE.txt in the base directory of the repository that clearly states under which license the content is being made available. This is because creative works are automatically eligible for intellectual property (and thus copyright) protection. Reusing creative works without a license is dangerous, because the copyright holders could sue you for copyright infringement.

Learning outcomes
  • Explain why adding licensing information to a repository is important.
  • Choose a proper license.
  • Explain differences in licensing and social expectations.

Licensing

10509

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Citation

It is good to add a README file to a repository to communicate important information about your project. A README, along with a repository licence, citation file, contribution guidelines, and a code of conduct, communicates expectations for your project and helps you manage contributions.

Learning outcomes

Make your work easy to cite

Citation

10511

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