[Author Prev][Author Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Author Index][Thread Index]
Re: [pygame] GPL'd music?
Dont ask me about copyrights. ;)
But about content packs and 3D models
http://www.daz3d.com/ (they also sell Bryce, a very easy and handy
3D-modelller, also for trees)
http://www.contentparadise.com (they sell Poser for 3D models,
animations, etc.)
Dont ask me if they are pyogre compatible but they support in general
more than one 3D format.
Another page I highly appreciate (very high quality 2D/3D products)
is www.doschdesign.de (german page but you can switch to english)
The first two links also offer free 3D models you can download.
And yes, all 3 in general sell their product (quality has its
price ;) ). I was looking a lot around for "free" models and sounds
and they either were not free or the quality was very low or there
were that copyright thingy you also experienced.
Greetings
Farai
Am 24.10.2006 um 05:27 schrieb Kris Schnee:
Ethan Glasser-Camp wrote:
I see that there are resources linked to on the pygame site where I
can download music for use in a video game. But licenses vary on
these
compositions, ranging from "up to 500 physical copies (with
purchase)"
on massivetracks.net to Creative Commons licenses for the tracks
found
with the Creative Commons search engine. However, if I want to GPL my
game, this rules out all of the above -- not even Creative Commons
licenses are GPL-compatible. Isn't this a problem, or do most people
ignore it? And if it is a problem, which sites provide GPL-compatible
music?
I recently found the music site http://www.jamendo.com/ , and
thought some of the music there might be suitable for a game. But I
begin to understand the concept of these great-sounding open
licenses "infecting" a piece of software when I see language like:
"You can copy, distribute, advertise, and perform this album as
long as you... distribute all your derivative works under the same
license." I interpret that to mean, "Not only can you not do
anything commercial with it, you're obligated to invite others to
give away _your_ work if you use mine."
FreeSound ( http://freesound.iua.upf.edu/ ) offers a lot of sound
clips that could be useful, under the "Creative Commons Sampling
Plus License." That license sounds less onerous, but there's a
tricky part: you may "creatively transform" the work for profit, or
"distribute" the whole thing not for profit. I took two courses in
copyright law and I still don't understand what that means! For our
purposes, say I make a game and use something from FreeSound as SFX
or music, including the whole file or an .ogg version of it. Am I
"creatively transforming" it by including it in a game, such that I
can use it commercially, or just "transforming" it and getting only
the limited non-comercial license?
There was also a company whose name I've forgotten, offering
"content packs" featuring things like 3D trees suitable for PyOgre
and various sets of game music.
Kris