![]() ![]() There is nothing left to administer licensed content is irrevocably available for the world to use. Once we made the SRD 5.1 available under a Creative Commons license, the process is complete. There is no need for anyone to have any active involvement. If Creative Commons doesn’t administer the license, who does? Nobody. They do not have an active role in the process. They do not take ownership in the content you create either. What does Creative Commons not do? Creative Commons does not take ownership of the content that we are licensing. The CC-BY-4.0 license we chose to use is also irrevocable and Wizards can’t modify it. These licenses are standardized, well-written, widely accepted, and trusted around the world. What does Creative Commons do? Creative Commons writes open-source licenses. ![]() You can read more at the Creative Commons website. What is Creative Commons? As posted on the Creative Commons website: “Creative Commons is a nonprofit organization that helps overcome legal obstacles to the sharing of knowledge and creativity.” They do this, in part, by creating licenses that make it easier for someone, like Wizards, to let people use their content. New material will be added to the SRD if it is necessary to keep this document and its contents compatible with the latest D&D rules. Will more content be added to the SRD? The full 5th edition game and its expansions are available for use via the DMs Guild. Word's bookmark function doesn't allow spaces, so the bookmarks in the PDF don't have spaces. The bookmarks are created in Word and translated into the PDF (which means we don't have to manually add all the bookmarks into the PDF every time). Why do the bookmarks not have spaces in them? The SRD is built in Microsoft Word and converted to a PDF. For example, the 3E SRD has the delay poison spell, but in 5th edition that's handled by the protection from poison spell, so protection from poison is in the SRD. Why is the SRD missing some spells, magic items, and monsters? In general, the criteria for what went into the SRD is if it (1) was in the 3E SRD, (2) has an equivalent in 5th edition D&D, and (3) is vital to how a class, magic item, or monster works. We encourage players, DMs, and publishers to come up with their own backgrounds and feats. Why does the SRD only have one background and one feat? Why do the PC races not include all of the subraces? The goal of the SRD is to allow users to create new content, not to replicate the text of the whole game. Content you publish under Creative Commons must use its attribution terms as specified in its SRD 5.1 preamble.Content you publish under OGL 1.0a must use its attribution terms as specified in the license. ![]()
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