De persoon die een werk voorziet van deze licentie stelt dit werk beschikbaar aan het publieke domein door, voor zover dit wettelijk is toegestaan, afstand te doen van alle rechten op het werk in de zin van het auteursrecht, met inbegrip van alle aanverwante of naburige rechten. U kunt het werk kopiëren, aanpassen, distribueren en uitvoeren, ook voor commerciële doeleinden, zonder dat u daarvoor toestemming hoeft te vragen.
http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/deed.enCC0Creative Commons Zero, Public Domain Dedicationfalsefalse
The photographical reproduction of this work is covered under the article § 59 of the German copyright law, which states that "It shall be permissible to reproduce, by painting, drawing, photography or cinematography, works which are permanently located on public ways, streets or places and to distribute and publicly communicate such copies. For works of architecture, this provision shall be applicable only to the external appearance."
As with all other “limits of copyright by legally permitted uses”, no changes to the actual work are permitted under § 62 of the German copyright law (UrhG).
This work prominently depicts a work of illegal graffiti which might not be in the public domain and has not been released under a free license.
Occasionally graffiti will be kept, using the claim that an author might be rejected any copyright relief based on an illegal act; however, there is no evidence of this legal theory being tested. See Commons:Copyright rules by subject matter#Graffiti.
Official Commons policy is Commons:Project scope/Precautionary principle, which declines claims such as "The copyright owner will not bother to sue or cannot afford to." or "Nobody knows who the copyright owner is".
Complex understanding of the law may be required to determine whether the graffiti in this work would actually be eligible for copyright enforcement.