These resources are copyrighted and licensed under terms that allow free redistribution in some form. There may be requirements to credit the original authors, or restrictions on making modifications. Check the license posted on each site for such restrictions. Note well: many of these sources cannot be used directly in Wikipedia. See
open content for more details.
To make the distinction between these items and
public domain and
GFDL resources clear,
Connected: An Internet Encyclopedia was last updated in 1997. Here is their
license: "Copying and redistribution of Connected: An Internet Encyclopedia is freely permitted, as is the creation, copying, and distribution of derivative works. The Requests For Comments (RFCs) are covered by a separate copyright, included below." I think we should contact the editor before importing anything into Wikipedia.
I guess it was updated since, though the main page wasn't: have a look at
[1].
WebMuseum - their
license agreement is based on the
Creative Commons License Attribution-ShareAlike 1.0 License; however, it explicitly allows (under point 7) copying under the GNU FDL. Contains information about art styles and painters, and images of artworks. Note: The WebMusum article on
Hiroshige is identical to
Encarta's.
The UK Public Records Office publishes documents that are
Crown Copyright This allows "accurate" reproduction with an acknowledgment for some materials - not images for example.
ShutterGlow.com - Website not working as of July 2016. Wayback machine still allows access. A collection of high resolution free photos under CC 3.0 attribution license
http://www.lacucaracha.info/ has extensive information on the
Spanish Civil War, albeit from a
left political POV. Their webmaster Tomas Capdevila says, "I explicitly allow anyone to copy the text content on La Cucaracha The Spanish Civil War web site and reuse it, unchanged or changed, with or without mentioning the source, partially or as a whole, with the exception of text being marked as belonging to another author (like quotations) or mirrored web pages. Please notice that some of the photography's could be copyrighted in your country."
University of Wisconsin Digital Collections a large database of images and sound files (recently passed the 1 million file mark), many of which explicitly allow fair use rights, many other images published before 1923 (see the individual file's page in the collection for specific rights).
The Boletín Oficial del Estado (Spanish state official paper) has set up a
web site with scanned images of ALL of its content from 1875 up to 1967. It's part of a more general
site. It makes available all laws and decrees of the Spanish government (including both sides during the Spanish Civil War) and many other petty official documents. Laws should generally be public domain, and some other documents will be old enough to be public domain. Someone may want to look into the legal status of these materials, it's possible that the bulk of the site is public domain, in which case someone may want to move this item to
Wikipedia:Public domain.
DigitalNZ, a large collection of New Zealand related images, film, newspapers, etc. sourcing from 300+ collections. Majority of images licensed under Creative Commons.
Theopedia Theology - Licensed under Creative Commons
Social and arts
Flags of the World 12,900 pages about flags and view more than 23,000 images of flags (be careful in referring to them, as many of them, minor flags specially and by Jaume Ollé, seem completely invented - verify with other sources too).
Free Music! (Dead Link) Recordings of works of classical music in the public domain, released under the EFF's Open Audio License copyleft.
Internet History Sourcebooks A collection of public domain and "copy permitted" (whatever that means) historical source documents collected by Paul Halsall at Fordham -- note: he claims copyright on some forms of these documents.
Soil and Health Library: A collection of books on holistic agriculture, holistic health, self-sufficient living, and personal development. Some books are in the public domain, others are not.
DICT.org: Collection of dictionary databases in the public domain or under other free or semi-free licenses including
GFDL consist of several public domain and semi-free dictionary resources.
[2].
UNCG Libraries, Archives and Manuscripts Department - Finding aids for manuscript collections documenting historical figures and organizations. Abstracted information about the subject/collection may be shared freely, content of the collections themselves may be protected under copyright.
LGBT History UK project Online encyclopedia of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender life in the United Kingdom throughout history. Licensed under Creative Commons.
Uranium Information Centre (Australia) (Closed in 2008) Has educational info on nuclear and uranium industries - bottom of page states that most material on the UIC Web Site (specific exceptions listed) may be used or reproduced freely, with acknowledgment.
Lessons in Electric Circuits by Tony R. Kuphaldt: a series of six textbooks about electronics, under the Design Science License.
The Connexions Project, a project held by
Rice University, features dozens of
complete courses mostly in
Mathematics and
Electrical engineering. All content is covered by the
Creative Commons License (Atrribution License v1.0). Can be copied/adopted to Wikipedia with a proper attribution. From their site: Connexions is a collaborative, community-driven approach to authoring, teaching, and learning that seeks to provide a cohesive body of high-quality educational content to anyone in the world, for free.
Infosecpedia is a
wiki encyclopedia and handbook for information security related topics, published under the
Creative Commons License (Attribution License v1.0).
Encyclopedia of Laser Physics and Technology by Dr. Rüdiger Paschotta, published online by RP Photonics Consulting GmbH; it focuses on laser technology, as well as fiber-optic technology, nonlinear optics and various supplementary topics. Direct copying of text and illustrations
requires asking for permission.
Blaikiewell Animal Sanctuary has free photographs of animals, plants, fungus, frost, etc. All can be tagged as {{CopyrightedFreeUse}}.
Canadian Wildlife Service "
Hinterland Who's Who".
[3] Useful material on various birds and mammals.
The
California Bureau of Land Management provides a large number of photographs and images (particularly of wildlife and natural locations). It requests photo credit, and its copyright release states that "Photographs and images may be used free of charge for print and electronic publications. Photos and images may not be used to show, by implication or otherwise, that the U.S. Department of the Interior or BLM endorses any product, service or political view."
PLoS Biology[4] is a peer-reviewed journal licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License.
PLoS Medicine[5] is a peer-reviewed journal licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License (and similarly for the growing family of journals beginning with PLoS.)
everystockphoto.com - Searching over 2.2 million free photos, including a variety of non-PD licenses. Free user accounts allow drag and drop collections, rating, tagging, and advanced search.
PicFindr.com - Searches hand picked Free stock photo-, public domain-, and photo community sites. Includes the ability to search by rights! (whether you need to give credit, ask permission or not)
These resources are copyrighted and licensed under terms that allow free redistribution in some form. There may be requirements to credit the original authors, or restrictions on making modifications. Check the license posted on each site for such restrictions. Note well: many of these sources cannot be used directly in Wikipedia. See
open content for more details.
To make the distinction between these items and
public domain and
GFDL resources clear,
Connected: An Internet Encyclopedia was last updated in 1997. Here is their
license: "Copying and redistribution of Connected: An Internet Encyclopedia is freely permitted, as is the creation, copying, and distribution of derivative works. The Requests For Comments (RFCs) are covered by a separate copyright, included below." I think we should contact the editor before importing anything into Wikipedia.
I guess it was updated since, though the main page wasn't: have a look at
[1].
WebMuseum - their
license agreement is based on the
Creative Commons License Attribution-ShareAlike 1.0 License; however, it explicitly allows (under point 7) copying under the GNU FDL. Contains information about art styles and painters, and images of artworks. Note: The WebMusum article on
Hiroshige is identical to
Encarta's.
The UK Public Records Office publishes documents that are
Crown Copyright This allows "accurate" reproduction with an acknowledgment for some materials - not images for example.
ShutterGlow.com - Website not working as of July 2016. Wayback machine still allows access. A collection of high resolution free photos under CC 3.0 attribution license
http://www.lacucaracha.info/ has extensive information on the
Spanish Civil War, albeit from a
left political POV. Their webmaster Tomas Capdevila says, "I explicitly allow anyone to copy the text content on La Cucaracha The Spanish Civil War web site and reuse it, unchanged or changed, with or without mentioning the source, partially or as a whole, with the exception of text being marked as belonging to another author (like quotations) or mirrored web pages. Please notice that some of the photography's could be copyrighted in your country."
University of Wisconsin Digital Collections a large database of images and sound files (recently passed the 1 million file mark), many of which explicitly allow fair use rights, many other images published before 1923 (see the individual file's page in the collection for specific rights).
The Boletín Oficial del Estado (Spanish state official paper) has set up a
web site with scanned images of ALL of its content from 1875 up to 1967. It's part of a more general
site. It makes available all laws and decrees of the Spanish government (including both sides during the Spanish Civil War) and many other petty official documents. Laws should generally be public domain, and some other documents will be old enough to be public domain. Someone may want to look into the legal status of these materials, it's possible that the bulk of the site is public domain, in which case someone may want to move this item to
Wikipedia:Public domain.
DigitalNZ, a large collection of New Zealand related images, film, newspapers, etc. sourcing from 300+ collections. Majority of images licensed under Creative Commons.
Theopedia Theology - Licensed under Creative Commons
Social and arts
Flags of the World 12,900 pages about flags and view more than 23,000 images of flags (be careful in referring to them, as many of them, minor flags specially and by Jaume Ollé, seem completely invented - verify with other sources too).
Free Music! (Dead Link) Recordings of works of classical music in the public domain, released under the EFF's Open Audio License copyleft.
Internet History Sourcebooks A collection of public domain and "copy permitted" (whatever that means) historical source documents collected by Paul Halsall at Fordham -- note: he claims copyright on some forms of these documents.
Soil and Health Library: A collection of books on holistic agriculture, holistic health, self-sufficient living, and personal development. Some books are in the public domain, others are not.
DICT.org: Collection of dictionary databases in the public domain or under other free or semi-free licenses including
GFDL consist of several public domain and semi-free dictionary resources.
[2].
UNCG Libraries, Archives and Manuscripts Department - Finding aids for manuscript collections documenting historical figures and organizations. Abstracted information about the subject/collection may be shared freely, content of the collections themselves may be protected under copyright.
LGBT History UK project Online encyclopedia of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender life in the United Kingdom throughout history. Licensed under Creative Commons.
Uranium Information Centre (Australia) (Closed in 2008) Has educational info on nuclear and uranium industries - bottom of page states that most material on the UIC Web Site (specific exceptions listed) may be used or reproduced freely, with acknowledgment.
Lessons in Electric Circuits by Tony R. Kuphaldt: a series of six textbooks about electronics, under the Design Science License.
The Connexions Project, a project held by
Rice University, features dozens of
complete courses mostly in
Mathematics and
Electrical engineering. All content is covered by the
Creative Commons License (Atrribution License v1.0). Can be copied/adopted to Wikipedia with a proper attribution. From their site: Connexions is a collaborative, community-driven approach to authoring, teaching, and learning that seeks to provide a cohesive body of high-quality educational content to anyone in the world, for free.
Infosecpedia is a
wiki encyclopedia and handbook for information security related topics, published under the
Creative Commons License (Attribution License v1.0).
Encyclopedia of Laser Physics and Technology by Dr. Rüdiger Paschotta, published online by RP Photonics Consulting GmbH; it focuses on laser technology, as well as fiber-optic technology, nonlinear optics and various supplementary topics. Direct copying of text and illustrations
requires asking for permission.
Blaikiewell Animal Sanctuary has free photographs of animals, plants, fungus, frost, etc. All can be tagged as {{CopyrightedFreeUse}}.
Canadian Wildlife Service "
Hinterland Who's Who".
[3] Useful material on various birds and mammals.
The
California Bureau of Land Management provides a large number of photographs and images (particularly of wildlife and natural locations). It requests photo credit, and its copyright release states that "Photographs and images may be used free of charge for print and electronic publications. Photos and images may not be used to show, by implication or otherwise, that the U.S. Department of the Interior or BLM endorses any product, service or political view."
PLoS Biology[4] is a peer-reviewed journal licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License.
PLoS Medicine[5] is a peer-reviewed journal licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License (and similarly for the growing family of journals beginning with PLoS.)
everystockphoto.com - Searching over 2.2 million free photos, including a variety of non-PD licenses. Free user accounts allow drag and drop collections, rating, tagging, and advanced search.
PicFindr.com - Searches hand picked Free stock photo-, public domain-, and photo community sites. Includes the ability to search by rights! (whether you need to give credit, ask permission or not)