From October 2023 to July 2025, CC and the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative (CZI) partnered to promote the use of the CC BY 4.0 license on preprints.
Preprints are complete drafts of scientific research articles posted to an online repository (before formal peer review). Online repositories (for example, BioRxiv, arXiv, SSRN) are web-based platforms that post research outputs for scholarly publication. Preprints have long been part of the scientific publishing ecosystem and are increasingly becoming a vehicle for scientific dissemination.
The increasing use of preprints in life sciences shows the importance of rapid and equitable knowledge dissemination. Openly licensing preprints takes it one step further. Openly licensed preprints allow researchers and readers to access research without having to rely on subscriptions or paid access to research journals.
As of mid-2024, approximately 18% of the preprints published on arXiv, bioRxiv, medRxiv, and Research Square were openly licensed with CC BY. Our goal was to expand the adoption of the CC BY license on life sciences preprints. By developing model policies, training funders, and partnering with preprint servers to streamline open licensing practices, we’re ensuring that grant-funded research outputs are accessible, adaptable, and aligned with the growing demand for transparency and collaboration in scientific communication.
Project Objectives
- Create practical licensing guidance for researchers in the life sciences
- Propose model policies for funders and preprint servers
- Improve license selectors and default settings in preprint repositories
When you publish your research as a preprint, you can retain copyright and use an open license to maximize reuse. CC BY is the best open license for preprints. Authors retain their copyright while maximizing reuse. CC BY removes legal complexities and increases the sharing, reach, and accessibility of global knowledge.
Impact and Outcomes
This project ensured that open licensing was built into key research workflows.

We’ve also helped launch a new Wikipedia page about funders’ licensing policies to support informed decisions and broaden public awareness.
“I believe embracing CC BY licensing for preprints is the easiest, most cost-effective, most equitable, and most publisher-proof policy a funder can implement. It ensures global access to research without delay. Collaborating with Creative Commons to develop this preprint policy framework has been critical to its success, grounding it in trusted, globally recognized licensing principles that advance openness by design.”
– Ashley Farley, Senior Officer of Knowledge & Research Services at the Gates Foundation
Model Policy Framework for Open Preprints
Review the Model Policy Framework for Open Preprints here.

To support researchers navigating licensing decisions, we launched a short video and educational resources explaining why CC BY is the best option for preprints. These materials help researchers understand how CC licensing supports publication, AI transparency, and scientific reproducibility.
If you are a researcher, scientist, or knowledge producer, you are a creator. The knowledge you record as a research output is the scaffolding for collaboration. When you openly license your work, you are joining a global collective of researchers who are sharing their science and promoting open, universal access to knowledge. This video explains open licenses for research outputs and encourages researchers to use CC licenses for data, preprints, manuscripts, and journal articles.
We have created three PDF resources to provide more information:
- How the CC BY license for preprints impacts journal publication: A guide for researchers
- How the CC BY license for preprints impacts generative AI training: A guide for researchers
- Why use the CC BY license for preprints? A guide for researchers
We also delivered a webinar on why you should choose CC BY for preprints.
Looking Ahead
Our commitment to ensuring openness is built into scholarly dissemination workflows is rooted in our larger vision of a thriving, accessible commons. We believe there’s more to do, including embedding clear guidance on how preprint content should be used for AI training, empowering funders to require open license adoption, license enforcement mechanisms, expanding journal engagement, and expanding implementation worldwide. With continued support from funders, we are eager to build on this work and deepen its global impact.
This initiative was made possible thanks to our funder, the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, and our collaborators, especially the Open Research Funders Group and ASAPbio. Together, we are shaping a more inclusive research ecosystem and advancing equitable, open scientific communication.