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Users will submit content to my website. I want them to license that content under CC BY 4.0 when they do, otherwise they should not submit it. Thus, all user-submitted content will be released under this license.

I'm guessing this means they need to read and agree to a Terms Of Service. Is there a standard or common way to present a ToS (or other mechanism) that is specifically appealing to the libre/sharing/commons community?

(This question isn't limited to CC BY 4.0, imagine it's any Free Cultural Work license.)

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The way that StackExchange does it is a simple statement that you have read and agree with the Terms of Service when registering for an account. Some sites use a slightly stronger indication by requiring you to check a check-box to indicate you agree with the ToS.
This is all very standard for sites that allow the creation of accounts.

In the Terms of Service you need to make it clear that user-provided content is licensed to you under the CC-BY license. You could look at the ToS for StackExchange for inspiration.

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  • is there a way to present this that is specifically appealing to the libre/sharing/commons community (I've updated my question to add this emphasis)
    – lofidevops
    Commented Apr 6, 2018 at 11:48
  • for example, I just found out that Wikidata calls it "terms of use" - is this a thing?
    – lofidevops
    Commented Apr 6, 2018 at 11:49

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