

So anything you make, you agree to share as well under these same rules. Share-AlikeĪny content based on the SCP Foundation is itself going to be under Creative Commons. A link back to the source material, or other forms of citation if you're somehow referencing offline SCP materials. Online screen names work for attribution as long as they are in quotes, but if the author contacts you and wants you to use their real name or some other alias, you need to oblige.ģ. The author's name, or whatever they wish to be known as. You do not need to follow this exact format, but according to CC any attribution you provide must include:Ģ. In this case, if you wanted to do a work based entirely or partially on SCP-682, then you would need to add this somewhere accompanying the work. If you are using a general SCP Foundation idea (like a character, Group of Interest, or the concept of the Foundation as a whole) you only need to attribute the wiki in general. If you use a specific SCP item or tale, you must attribute the individual article as well as the wiki. The first requirement under Creative Commons is "attribution." Any derivative works (stuff based on the SCP Foundation) must attribute back to the original source, the SCP Foundation wiki. If you want to make a work based in the SCP Foundation universe, this means you need to follow the rules of this license.Īs mentioned earlier, the SCP Foundation uses a specific license, which has two key components: attribution and share-alike. The SCP Foundation uses a specific Creative Commons license. So, you want to make a work set in/based off of the SCP Foundation? That's awesome! Whether it's a game, short story, film, or anything else, we always welcome people who want to contribute to the SCP universe.

Hey, the SCP Foundation is cool! I want to make something based off it! What should I do? See the final tab "A Word on SCP-173" for more information. Commercial use of this property may result in serious legal action against the seller. The image is not released under Creative Commons. Releasing it under the CC-BY-SA license means that people will be able to copy your work wholesale, and even sell it, provided that they properly attribute you and release their work under the same license.ĭo not sell anything related to SCP-173's former image, Izumi Kato's Untitled 2004. Specific release statements may be found under the "For Specific Creator Types" tab.

Doing this will release it under the CC-BY-SA license. Add the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 license (or CC-BY-SA for short) to the derived work. For example:Ħ82's Lovely Tea Party is based on "SCP-682" by "Dr Gears": Ģ. Attribute the works that you're using to the wiki and to the specific author, if possible. In order for your derivative work to be kosher, you need to do two things:ġ.
