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In 3.0, the international (unported) license suite does not mention sui generis rights. However, ported 3.

0 licenses for jurisdictions where those rights exist


address them according to CC's 3.0 database rights policy. Under this policy, version 3.0 EU jurisdiction ports must license sui generis rights subject to the
terms and conditions of the license just like copyright and neighboring rights, but also must waive license restrictions and conditions (attribution, ShareAlike,
etc) for uses triggering database rightsso that if the use of a database published under a CC license implicated only database rights but not copyright, the
CC license requirements and prohibitions would not apply to that use. The license conditions and restrictions, however, continue to apply to all uses
triggering copyright. Other ports and the 3.0 international license are silent on sui generis database rights: databases and data are licensed (i.e., subject to
restrictions detailed in the license) to the extent copyrightable, and if data in the database or the database itself are not copyrightable the license restrictions
do not apply to those parts (though they still apply to the remainder). Thus, regardless of the CC 3.0 license at play (unported, an EU port, another port),
uses that implicate only database rights will not trigger the license conditions, while uses that implicate copyright will.

Neither the international nor the ported licenses that address database rights export the sui generis rights to jurisdictions where such rights are not
recognized (the ported licenses accomplish this as well through inclusion of a territoriality limitation). This avoids the imposition of restrictions based on sui
generis rights via contract where those rights are not enforceable or recognized. You may compare how different jurisdictions implemented this section of the
license.

Treatment of moral rights

In version 4.0, moral rights are waived to the limited extent necessary to exercise the licensed rights.

While the existence and extent of moral rights differ by jurisdiction, the most consistently present rights are those of attribution and integrity (the right to
prevent or halt the prejudicial use of ones work by another). The 1.0, 2.0, and 2.5 licenses were drafted to conform to U.S. law, and because U.S. law
recognizes moral rights in only very limited circumstances, the generic versions of those licenses suites do not address moral rights of authors.

The international licenses began to address moral rights in version 3.0. In version 4.0, moral rights are waived or not asserted to the extent possible under
local law, to the limited extent they would otherwise interfere with exercise of the licensed rights. This avoids establishing moral rights through the license
where they would not otherwise exist, but recognizes that there are jurisdictions where this limited waiver is not possible. The attribution requirements in
Section 3 of the 4.0 licenses may satisfy many jurisdictions' right of attribution; however, they are a requirement of the license regardless of whether moral
rights apply to a use.

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