I would argue that there are a few ways this phrase can be inverted:

No rights reserved

Implies that the author waives all rights to his/her work (i.e. ultimately places it in the public domain)

All rights included

I’ve seen this one in the context of royalty-free music being used in the commercial sense, where if you pay for the license, you can use that song anytime anywhere, with all rights to the song. This seems to be the opposite of “All rights reserved” which we should know by now what it means

Copyleft

While not really a phrase, it is the opposite of copyright itself. Used primarily in software but maybe some other media can also be considered copyleft. As far as I’m aware, it has some ties with copyright itself (that you cannot remove attribution from the author, and, in case of software, must distribute it as is, without putting any restrictions yourself)

There are probably more means other than what I’ve listed, and I would love to hear your thoughts and suggestions!

      • Johnny
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        51 year ago

        CC0 is the one CC licence you can safely use for code, as per the official recommendations. For all other CC licences, it is (strongly) discouraged.

      • Johnny
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        31 year ago

        Weird/confusing name, questionable legality and the website went down a while back (while mentioned explicitly in the licence…)

        Use CC0 1.0 or Zero Clause BSD instead. They are more reputable, and all decent “public domain equivalent” licences are… well, equivalent in effect, anyway.

      • kopper [they/them]
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        11 year ago

        afaik some people are worried about the “legal enforceability” of the unlicense, which is funny given the point of it is to be an explicit “go do what you want” license.

    • @SergioFLS
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      21 year ago

      if it explicitly granted patent rights i would definitely use it for software tbh