On 01.04.2017 17:19, Sam Kuper wrote:
In the case of both CC BY and CC BY-SA, the rights granted to the *recipient of the licensed work* include the freedom to create adaptations and to distribute or publicly perform them, subject *only* to a small list of restrictions. CC BY has a shorter list of restrictions than CC BY-SA.
Perfectly summarized, yet you miss the point. It doesn't say anything about granting to change the terms.
As such, CC BY grants the creator of an adapted work the freedom to publicly performed or distribute that adapted work under a different license.
A license is about permission, not restriction. It can only restrict permissions it granted. So again, this is only the case if the license explicitly states permission to license the adapted work under different terms. I see a pattern here: Every time you claim this, you don't quote. Yet, you write thousands of words, have a quote on every other thing. Just to hide that you have nothing to substantiate this claim.
I just have the bad feeling, that you may harm CC BY's reputation. Have you ever asked somebody at CC if your interpretation is correct? If not, please do so or consult an expert before you try to give other people further advice.
Nico