derivative works from things that are "public domain in the U.S" or other countries

derivative works from things that are "public domain in the U.S" or other countries

Ragnar Random's picture

surt pointed out in the comments on a recent submission about u.s. government works being "public domain in the u.s." and how they may not be public domain in other places.

i didn't want to cloud that asset's comments with discussion, as i have questions similar but not directly related to u.s. government works, and I figured a forum thread would be more accesible to others.

but the question is, how does copyright apply here? i am in the u.s. so they are "public domain" to me. if i use what is in the "public domain" for me, then do i have the rights to re-license the derivative works as cc0 (or something else) ?

the reason why this is relevant to me is i am currently working on assets for a game that are derivative of images from old books on project gutenberg. the copyrights on these works are expired in the u.s. but possibly not elsewhere (germany, i be looking at you)

likewise, the australian version of project gutenberg has content that is public domain in australia but not yet public domain in the u.s. (nothing i have use for as art reference, but some conan stories by robert e. howard have passed into the public domain in australia before the u.s.) so would an australian be able to "re-license" derivatives from those works?

in regard to u.s. government works, there is an entity (uncle sam) that could potentially exert their copyright against non-u.s. persons using "public domain in the u.s." government works.

but for old books that have passed into the public domain, there is noone who could come after us, correct?

in my opinion i am 99.999% sure i am in the clear in regards to making derivatives of "public domain in the u.s." (government works or copyright-expired) works in my game projects, but i would like to be able to release my derivatives on oga when i am done with the game.

open discussion, invitation to folks who know more about this stuff. i get that we are not lawyers and noone can give actual legal advice, but i'd love to hear what you think on this topic. especially from MedicineStorm who will ultimately have to flag potential licensing issues ;)