Answered By: Victoria Hedley
Last Updated: Mar 17, 2023     Views: 76

Under the terms of the policy, the default licence is a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) licence, as this is the licence required by many funders including UKRI and the Wellcome Trust.

Where a funder acknowledged in the article has authorised the use of a more restrictive Creative Commons licence, such as the Creative Commons No-Derivates (CC BY-ND) licence, then the author should confirm this to dro.admin@durham.ac.uk. This will then the licence granted to the University and applied to the manuscript available from Durham Research Online (DRO).

Where no funder requirements on licencing of the Accepted Manuscript apply, then the author may request in writing to dro.admin@durham.ac.uk that a more restrictive Creative Commons No-Derivates (CC BY-ND) or Creative Commons Share-Alike (CC BY-SA) licence is assigned as an alternative to the default Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) licence.

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