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Why The Charlotte Mercury Publishes Under Creative Commons BY-ND 4.0

The Charlotte Mercury drops paywalls and adopts a Creative Commons BY-ND 4.0 license, betting that open reuse drives reach, trust, and civic engagement, while sponsors keep the lights on.

Jack Beckett· Staff Writer
||2 min read
CLT Mercury Commerce Hub Illustration – Cash Register, Receipts, and Shopping Bag (Editorial Ink Style)
CLT Mercury Commerce Hub Illustration – Cash Register, Receipts, and Shopping Bag (Editorial Ink Style)

No Paywall, No Problem 📜☕

Charlotte is drowning in gated links. We refuse to join the barricade. Every original article on The Charlotte Mercury now carries a Creative Commons BY-ND 4.0 badge, turning readers into couriers and our newsroom into an open archive.

What the License Lets You Do

  • Copy & repost in full—print, blog, newsletter, doesn't matter.
  • Run ads alongside it if you like; we don't mind.
  • Credit us and link back.
  • Don't change a comma without permission. Accuracy stays intact.

Think of BY-ND as a standing "yes" slip. No emails. No invoices. Quick civic glucose. See the official explainer at Creative Commons.

Why Open Beats Locked

Reach Over Restriction

ProPublica's open-license model triples a story's audience on average, according to its reuse logs. We want that multiplier.

Trust Without Turnstiles

"Paywall" is not in our vocabulary. Privacy-first means zero trackers; Creative Commons means zero tollbooths.

Sponsors Prefer Eyeballs, Not Log-ins

Our revenue comes from community backers who like big, public impact. More readers, happier sponsors.

The Fine Print We Actually Like

CC BY-ND 4.0 grants the world the right to distribute and monetize our unaltered text. Edits, translations, and photo reuse still need a note to the editor. That balance keeps misinformation out while syndication flows.

How to Republish a Mercury Story

  1. Copy the entire piece.
  2. Paste this line on top: "Originally published by The Charlotte Mercury."
  3. Link to the source.
  4. Go live.

Questions? Ping the newsroom through our contact form.

FAQ

Can a for-profit site run our article? Yes.

Can I tweak the headline? Please don't—context matters. Add a local slug above it instead.

What about images? Staff photos are separate; ask first.


About the Author

Jack Beckett files copy fueled by a large Colombian from Einstein Bros on South Boulevard—thanks, Phillip, for the steady drip. ☕ You'll find Jack debating zoning minutiae in the comments or on Twix: @queencityexp.


Creative Commons License

© 2025 Strolling Ballantyne / The Charlotte Mercury
This article, "Why Charlotte Mercury Publishes Under Creative Commons BY-ND 4.0," by Jack Beckett is licensed under CC BY-ND 4.0.

"Why Charlotte Mercury Publishes Under Creative Commons BY-ND 4.0"
by Jack Beckett, The Charlotte Mercury (CC BY-ND 4.0)


Still curious? Read our Privacy Policy, scan the Terms of Service, grab assets from Media, or just holler via Contact Us. We keep cookies in the kitchen, not your browser.

Jack Beckett

Staff Writer

Staff writer for Mercury Local covering government, elections, public safety, and development across multiple publications. Beckett has filed more than 600 stories on local policy, crime, zoning, and civic accountability in Connecticut and the Carolinas.

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