I was listening to an episode of Coding Blocks podcast, and they pointed out something huge that I didn't realize until I heard it about the license for code available on Stack Overflow.
Excerpt from their podcast notes:
This is kinda huge because I know of how much of an invaluable resource Stack Overflow is for developers, I use it fairly regularly in my day to day work if I have questions or just want to see an example.
Excerpt from their podcast notes:
If you use code from Stack Overflow, you need to give attribution to the person who wrote it (and where it was) but also need to change your license to the same license that they have!Be careful about sharing/using code to/from Stack Overflow! You need to be aware of the licensing and what it might mean for your application.
- What is the license for the content I post? (Stack Overflow)
- Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) (Creative Commons)
- Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) (tldrlegal.com)
- We Still Don’t Understand Open Source Licensing (episode 5)
This is kinda huge because I know of how much of an invaluable resource Stack Overflow is for developers, I use it fairly regularly in my day to day work if I have questions or just want to see an example.