this post was submitted on 14 Oct 2024
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Imo skip the open source license. You're wanting to give this specific organization access to your work. If you follow the suggestions here and license it under creative commons or some other open source license then you're also opening the door for others to use that work. It would be better to give the organization use of your work in its current form but otherwise reserve all rights for yourself, via a custom (non open source) license. This way in the future you can continue doing whatever you want with it, and maybe that means open sourcing when you're ready to do so.
Ofc if you're ready to open source now then go for it.
This is a good point, thank you :)
I was thinking along the lines of not restricting myself from using my own work in the future, but I hadn't thought about third parties being able to use it too. I'm not concerned about other people using the code behind the website, for example. I'm still learning, so it's probably more spaghetti than anything decent, but @jqubed@lemmy.world pointed out in their reply, I wouldn't be able to stop anyone from using graphics etc.
No problem! As far as graphics go, if you open source then you can specify in your repo's Readme what parts are under what license.
"All html, Javascript, css are licensed under XYZ"
"All graphics/images used with permission by ABC for exclusive use within this project"
It isn't particularly uncommon, and you could even list out specific graphics under what license, or structure them in the repository based on license /assets/licenseName if needed
That's a great idea, thanks :)