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Started June 4th, 2013 · 9 replies · Latest reply by qubodup 11 years, 5 months ago
http://tindeck.com/listen/xbpr
contains a bunch of freesound samples as well as others
I even made use of the corrupted MPEG wav somebody uploaded
Well, three of the four licenses that exist on Freesound require that the authors get put into the credits of music, remixes and videos and such.
You can find out what you downloaded and when on http://www.freesound.org/home/attribution/ .
Cheers
Unfortunately Ragnar crediting "all of Freesound" doesn't help.
The individual artists who created the original files you used still do not get the credit and recognition they deserve and is legally required. Easier for you maybe, but still against the spirit of Freesound and the rights of the individuals. I'm sure you don't want to be viewed in same light as SoundEffectsFactory!(Look for post about SEF in the Legal Forum.)
Regards Wibby.
Ragnar59 wrote:
I honestly don't know which sounds, there's like at least 20 of them in there somewhere
only 778 to go through ... http://www.freesound.org/people/Ragnar59/downloaded_sounds/
I put out the album
http://djsaint-hubert.bandcamp.com/
I was able to look in the wavetable for each song and figured out who to credit
I'm glad to see that you went through the effort.
Your attribution might be insufficient in the case of CC-BY 3.0 licensed works. See 4(b) for attribution requirements. They include name, title, URL... http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode
As far as I'm informed, Timbre and djgriffin (and possibly others) use CC-BY-NC 3.0 only. If CC-BY-NC 3.0 content is used to create commercial content, it is an infringement of the license (unless another agreement has been established between the parties).