I got a request from EasyBib.com for CSL citation license
I helped write the citation style code for a few journals for the Zotero Style Repository a while back. I recently got an e-mail from someone at EasyBib.com asking if the company could use the citation styles I created and which licensing scheme they should use. Has anyone else gotten an e-mail like this? Is this spam? What have folks done with this request? What licensing schemes have you used?
All your styles on the repository are licensed I believe (i.e. they have a <rights> tag)? Almost all styles on the repository are licensed under a creative commons Attribution-Share Alike (by-sa) license and that's the license they should/must keep using if they use the styles.
The site looks legit enough.
The current recommendation is to use the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
It probably isn't spam-- and they don't need to ask for your permission, so long as they abide by the terms of the stated license.
I hope the EasyBib people haven't emailed all the style authors. I can imagine that would be a bit annoying.
No mention yet of CSL on the EasyBib site, but I hope this integration and new usage of CSL and citeproc-js leads to even more improvements in the community.
The EasyBib project is a welcome adoption for CSL. Their core product (simpler than Zotero) targets high school essayists. The project's aim with CSL support is to offer an incremental upgrade path to their users, first moving to CSL-based styles within the EasyBib product, but with the option of migrating data to other reference managers (including Zotero) for more demanding tasks. It's a good thing.
(Edit: I'll correspond with the project about attribution, but I don't imagine there will be any difficulty.)