Attribution

Attribution means giving proper credit to the original creator, rights holder, or source when you use licensed or shared material. In copyright and licensing workflows, attribution can be a required condition of use, but credit alone does not replace permission when a separate license or clearance is still needed.

Quick facts:
Also called: credit, source credit, creator credit – Applies to: music, images, video, articles, templates, and other copyrighted works – Used for: identifying the creator and satisfying license terms – Not the same as: permission, ownership, or a sync license.

Example:
You download a CC BY image for a blog post. You can use it, including commercially, if you credit the creator, identify the source, link the license, and note material changes where required.

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Free Tools:

How should I credit this CC music? Attribution Line Generator

Gotchas:

  • Attribution is not a legal shortcut. Saying “music by…” or naming the artist does not automatically give you the right to use a track in a video, ad, app, or client project.
  • The required credit may be broader than just the creator’s name. Creative Commons recommends including title, author, source, and license – often remembered as TASL.
  • Attribution must not imply endorsement. You can credit the creator, but not in a way that suggests they approve your brand, campaign, channel, or product.
  • Attribution rules vary by license and context. Some systems treat credit as a license condition, while moral-rights discussions treat attribution as a separate author interest tied to being identified as the creator.

FAQs

No. Attribution is credit. Permission comes from copyright ownership, a license, an exception, or another valid legal basis for use.

A solid attribution usually identifies the creator, the work or source, the license, and any changes made. Creative Commons commonly recommends the TASL approach: Title, Author, Source, License.

Not automatically. For music, credit may be required by a license, but it does not substitute for the actual rights you need for video, ads, apps, or client delivery.

Not always. Some licenses allow credit in any reasonable manner, as long as the required information is included and the credit does not imply endorsement.

Yes. Attribution is also discussed as a moral-rights issue in copyright policy, especially around an author’s interest in being identified as the creator of the work.


Related terms

Creative Commons (CC)CC BY LicenseCopyright NoticeDerivative Work • License Terms • Public DomainRoyalty-FreeSync License