Planet Creative Commons

This page aggregates blogs from Creative Commons, CC jurisdiction projects, and the CC community. Opinions are those of individual bloggers.

CC-SG Adopter: Firdaus “My Music Haven”

CC Singapore, November 27, 2009 10:06 AM   License: Attribution 3.0 Unported


I got to know Firdaus from the Songcraft Songwriting Circle. Here’s his self-produced online album titled “Souled Out (2009)”, released under a CC-BY-NC-ND Singapore 3.0. license.

CC-SG adopter: my music haven: Souled Out (2009)

His album can be downloaded as a zip file, here.

Posted in CC-SG Adopters

CC Korea는 2009년 시맨틱 웹 컨퍼런스를 후원합니다

CC Korea (Korean), November 27, 2009 04:14 AM   License: 저작자표시 2.0 대한민국







"웹은 모든 사람들이 손쉽게 정보를 공유할 수 있는 공간이며 어떤 장애도 없이 이를 이용할 수 있어야 한다"  by Tim Berners-Lee

경험과 지식은 공유되었을 때에 가치가 더해지면 때로는 누군가에게는 희망이 되기도 합니다.

웹에서의 다양한 정보가 유기적으로 편리하게 공유되기 위한 시맨틱웹의 기술적인 지식과 경험을 공유의 행사인 2009년 시맨틱 웹컨퍼런스를 CC KOREA가 응원합니다. 저희 CC Korea 활동가인 이정표님께서도 "크리에이티브 커먼즈 라이선스와 시맨틱 웹 기술"라는 주제로 발표를 하실 예정입니다.

많은 분들이 2009년 시맨틱 웹컨퍼런스에 오셔서 서로의 경험과 지식을 나누는 시간이 되시면 좋겠습니다.

행사개요

  •   일시: 2009년 12월 4일 금요일 08:00 ~ 18:00
  •   장소: 국립중앙도서관 1층 국제회의실
  •   대상: 시맨틱 웹, 소셜 웹에 관심 있는 모든 분들 (선착순 200명)
  •   참가비: 1만원 (중식 지원)
  •   주관: 웹사이언스 워크그룹
  •   주최: 웹사이언스 워크그룹, 국립중앙도서관

행사에 대한 자세한 내용은 홈페이지 (http://www.websci.or.kr/events/2009/kswc/index.html)를 참고해 주시기 바랍니다. 

발표시간 발표주제 발표자
08:00-08:50 행사 등록
 
08:50-09:00 컨퍼런스 소개 및 오프닝
웹 사이언스 워크그룹
09:00-10:00 Why We Need Web Science Research?
한상기 교수
(KAIST)
10:00-10:40 도서관에서의 Linked Data의 활용
조명대 박사
(성균관대학교 사서교육원)
10:40-11:20 크리에이티브 커먼즈 라이선스와 시맨틱 웹 기술
이정표 (Creative Commons Korea)
11:20-12:00 온톨로지 모델링 및 URI 관리 방법
김평 박사
(KISTI)
12:00-13:00 Lunch Break
13:00-13:40 연구실/연구소/회사 소개
13:40-14:40 패널 토의: 웹사이언스와 시맨틱 웹

김성혁 (숙명여대 교수) 김우주 (연세대 교수) 김홍기 (서울대 교수) 박종헌 (서울대 교수) 옥철영 (울산대 교수) 최기선 (KAIST 교수) 한성국 (원광대 교수)
사회자
14:40-15:00 Coffee Break
15:00-15:40 시맨틱 소셜 네트워크 분석 사례 소개
이경일
(솔트룩스)
15:40-16:20 OntoFrame기반 시맨틱 서비스와 서비스 매쉬업
정한민 박사
(KISTI)
16:20-17:00 소셜 네트워크와 한의학 온톨로지 모델링
김상균 박사
(한의학연구원)
17:00-17:40 네이버 시맨틱 영화 검색
강병주 박사(NHN)
17:40-18:00 경품 추첨 및 정리

Into Infinity Sapporo!

CC Japan, November 26, 2009 11:22 PM   License: 表示 2.1 日本

INTO INFINITYの大きな特徴。それは東京と札幌二都市で開催される点です。
札幌はiSummit2008開催地であり,Creative Commonsにとって特別な場所です。
INTO INFINITYの札幌での展開もお楽しみに!

REmix 콘테스트에 도전해 보세요~

CC Korea (Korean), November 26, 2009 06:44 AM   License: 저작자표시 2.0 대한민국



한국정보화진흥원과 함께 remix 콘테스트를 개최합니다.
변경이 가능 조건의 CC라이선스를 적용한 작품들을 이용하여 새로운 창작물을 만들어 보세요~

참가 자격 : 누구나

공모방법 :  동영상 /사진 / 음악 분야의 1차 창작물을 바탕으로 RE-MIX 컨텐츠 제작

공모 일정

  • 접 수 : 11월 24일(화) ~ 12월 21일(월)
  • 결과발표 : 12월 28일(월)

문의처 : 02.2131.0735 / sakak84@nia.or.kr

시상 내역



자세한 정보는 REMIX 콘테스트 사이트를 참고해 주세요


 

Deproduction and Civic Pixel combine to form Open Media Foundation

Creative Commons, November 25, 2009 09:00 PM   License: Attribution 3.0 Unported

omf_logoDeproduction, a Denver-based video production company, and Civic Pixel, an open-source web development group, have joined forces to become the Open Media Foundation. The two groups were previously affiliated through Denver Open Media where they taught local communities media production tools, producing unique and engaging content in the process.

The Open Media Foundation picks up where these two groups left off, focusing upon services (video production, website creation, and graphic packages), education, and accessible tools. One of OMF’s most engaging aspects is the scalability of their mission. Nearly all of the content they produce is either CC-licensed or open-source, allowing it to be adopted easily and legally elsewhere. In January, Access San Francisco will become the 8th station to adopt the open source tools OMF developed as part of the Knight NewsChallenge. Similarly, through support from the Google Summer of Code program, the OMF made major improvements to CC support in Drupal.

To learn more about Open Media Foundation, check out this introductory video at their site – we interviewed Tony Shawcross, then Executive Director at Deproduction, back in January.

ccMixter Curation at the Free Music Archive

Creative Commons, November 25, 2009 07:15 PM   License: Attribution 3.0 Unported

ccmixterThis Monday, we began a guest curation series at our Free Music Archive portal. Rather than attempt to distill the vast landscape of CC-licensed music on our own, we thought it better to reach out to those on the ground working to support and expose these type of artists in their given communities. What better way to start then with a selection of tracks from ccMixter admin/developer/mentor Victor Stone:

For all the activism in the Open Music movement, nothing pushes the ball forward like brilliant, evocative music. While there is plenty of underground music of all sub-genres at ccMixter, there is also a growing collection of mainstream, above-ground producers who understand the value of sharing as a means of boosting their own creativity along with their exposure.

You can listen and download Victor’s full playlist at the FMA and ccMixter – titled Above Ground Collection, it is brimming with excellent music from producers with “an ear for the popular without sacrificing artistry.”

CC-Latam 2009 en Loja, Ecuador

CC Argentina, November 25, 2009 03:10 PM   License: Atribución-Compartir Obras Derivadas Igual 2.5 Argentina

A través del Dr. Vercelli, Bienes Comunes A.C. está presente en la Reunión de Creative Commons en América Latina. La Universidad Técnica Particular de Loja ha tomado a cargo la organización del evento y ha trabajado de forma excelente para la reunión. Además del CC-Latam 2009 hay otros dos eventos articulados: el I Congreso Campus [...]

我可以把過去以創用CC授權2.5版釋出的作品,改版成3.0版嗎?

CC Taiwan, November 25, 2009 02:18 PM   License: 姓名標示-相同方式分享 2.0 台灣

自從「創用CC授權3.0版臺灣華語版」正式上線後,常有人來詢問這個問題「我可以把過去以創用CC授權2.5版釋出的作品,改版成3.0版嗎?」 大家在詢問這個問題之前,可能要先再次確定自己是否了解3.0版與2.5版的差異性之外,還要了解這個差異性對於授權人與被授權人雙方有什麼影響,再決定要不要作「變動」。而所謂的「變動」,究竟是「直接升級成3.0版,並取代掉2.5版」?還是「3.0版與2.5版共同並存」呢?答案是後者「3.0版與2.5版共同並存」。 還記得創用CC授權的性質是具有「不可撤回性」的嗎?在法律文字中寫到「授權人授與您全球、免權利金、非專屬、『永久的(在著作權存續期間內)』許可」。因此,這個「改版成3.0版」,是沒有辦法直接升級的,並且2.5版與3.0版並沒有哪一個比較好、哪一個比較壞的問題,只有哪一個版本比較符合權利人(授權人)的需求的問題。 因此如果您(權利人)在比較過後,覺得3.0版比2.5版更符合您的需求,並希望將過去以創用CC授權2.5版釋出的作品,改版成3.0版,這時,會變成「3.0版與2.5版兩種授權共同並存」,結果是被授權人(例如:使用者)可以依照自己的想法,選擇適用對自己比較有利的授權條款,而履行其契約上的義務。例如2.5版沒有在契約裡規定「禁止背書的規定」,而3.0版有,即便授權人先採用2.5版釋出作品後,發現3.0版比較符合自己的需求,因此將2.5版的授權圖示或文字拿掉或取消後,再採用3.0版釋出一遍,被授權人(例如:使用者)還是可以主張因為2.5版沒有「禁止背書的規定」,而在使用該著作時,有可能隱涉到與該著作的原始著作人、授權人或姓名標示對象有任何關聯時,也不會被認定違反3.0版的契約義務(不過在這邊如何判斷使用情形有背書關係仍有待確定)。當然此處被授權人有沒有涉及到侵害法律上所賦予權利人的其他權利(例如人格權),又是另外一回事,而必須另外判斷。...

Creative Commoners & Copyleft Culture Festival 2009

CC Italy, November 25, 2009 10:45 AM   License: Attribuzione-Condividi allo stesso modo 2.5 Italia

Da giovedì 26 a sabato 28 novembre si terrà a Venezia Mestre la quarta edizione del Creative Commoners & Copyleft Culture Festival. L'evento, primo del suo genere in Italia ad occuparsi in maniera esclusiva di Cultura Copyleft, approda nella città lagunare dopo l'edizione del 2006 di San Donà di Piave e le successive due a Parma.
Maggiori informazioni e il programma dettagliato sono disponibili sul sito www.ccfestival.org.

leggi tutto

Proyección de RIP: A Remix Manifesto (2009) por Proyectos Ultravioleta

CC Guatemala, November 25, 2009 03:27 AM   License: Reconocimiento 3.0 Guatemala


Sí, los proyectos digitales están cobrando auge en Guatemala así como la apertura de nuevos espacios que nos ayudan a repensar una cultura compartida, usando los medios de hoy. Así, Proyectos Ultravioleta presenta este 25 de Noviembre mibienalesmejorquelatuya (mybiennialisbetterthanyours), un proyecto curatorial, en-línea, de Tolga Taluy (Turquía), creado para la X Biennale de Lyon. El proyecto reúne obra de 31 de los artistas web mas importantes del momento, incluyendo a AIDS-3DPetra CortrightAleksandra DomanovicOliver LaricAngelo PlessasHarmen Van Den DorpelDamon Zucconi

La invitación es para compartir una tarde dedicada a arte  e Internet, que tendrá como broche de horo la proyecciòn de RIP: a Remix Manifesto, por primera vez en Centroamérica.

4:00pm- Presentación en vivo de mibienalesmejorquelatuya con Tolga Taluy (via Skype), seguida por una sesión de preguntas y respuestas con el público presente.
http://mybiennialisbetterthanyours.com

 

6:00pm- Proyección de videos de YouTube seleccionados por AIDS 3-D (Daniel Keller y Nik Kosmas).
http://aids-3d.com

7:00pm- Proyección de RIP: A Remix Manifesto (2009), un documental sobre la cultura del remix de Brett Galyor.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1397511/

**Entrada gratuita, cupo limitado.

CC Learn Advanced Topics

Creative Commons, November 24, 2009 03:48 PM   License: Attribution 3.0 Unported

Earlier this year, CC Learn launched CC Learn Productions, highlighting reports and three document series: CC Learn Recommendations, CC Learn Explanations, and CC Learn Step by Step Guides. Since April, we have greatly expanded our repertoire to about a dozen documents, touching on basic topics such as Why CC BY? to legally incompatible content in OER. We’ve verily become document-making machines, cranking out new publications every month.

In the course of production, we found there are certain topics that cannot be distilled to a general audience, mainly because these topics are too specialized, and impractical, for the majority of CC’s user base. We realized that another document series was necessary, one specifically dealing with advanced topics, topics which require additional expertise and address the concerns of a smaller cross section of the OER community. The CC Learn Advanced Topics series, which is not intended for general consumption or to serve as legal advice, aims for this.

The first CC Learn Advanced Topic is CC Licenses and Trademarks: A Guide for Organizational OER Creators and Distributors. This primer distinguishes between copyright and trademark as they pertain to OER, and clarifies some of the confusion surrounding CC licenses and trademarks. For OER organizations with a strong trademark, or with the plans and capacity to build and sustain one, this primer is a guide to understanding the relationship between your organization’s rights as a copyright owner using CC licenses (particularly CC BY) and your organization’s trademark rights within the context of open educational resources (OER). This primer is not relevant for OER creators generally, as trademark law only pertains to those entities with the capacity to build and sustain a brand.

Though CC and CC Learn are open to consulting around business models generally, we are not in a position to give advice around trademark law. This primer is simply an explanation of a separate set of rights you may have to protect your work – trademark rights – while still allowing for the downstream adaptation, translation, and localization of your work that are so central to the goals of OER. Additionally, this primer is an example of one way certain organizations may deal with their concerns, and we hope that it will become an important document in our ongoing work.

All CC Learn Productions are licensed CC BY.

【イベント多数】INTO INFINITY Tokyoがスタート!

CC Japan, November 24, 2009 03:40 PM   License: 表示 2.1 日本

いよいよINTO INFINITY Tokyoスタートです!

“Remiks” Lawrence’a Lessiga – dyskusja nad książką

CC Poland, November 24, 2009 12:02 PM   License: Uznanie autorstwa 2.5 Polska

W Polsce ukazała się nowa książka Lawrence'a Lessiga, "Remiks. Aby sztuka i biznes rozkwitały w hybrydowej gospodarce". Jest to już druga jego książka wydana przez Wydawnictwa Akademickie i Profesjonalne po "Wolnej kulturze", która ukazała się 5 lat temu. Z tej okazji WAiP, we współpracy z SWPS oraz "Polityką" organizuje dyskusję nad ...

Obchody Dnia domeny publicznej, 30 grudnia 2009

CC Poland, November 24, 2009 12:02 PM   License: Uznanie autorstwa 2.5 Polska

30 grudnia w Bibliotece Narodowej odbędą się polskie obchody Dnia Domeny Publicznej, organizowane przez Koalicję Otwartej Edukacji (do której należy Creative Commons Polska). Domena publiczna czyli zasób twórczości do której wygasły już prawa autorskie jest najważniejszą podstawą kultury i edukacji. Po raz drugi już w Polsce będziemy obchodzić jej święto czyli ...

Hopeday for All 안내

CC Korea (Korean), November 24, 2009 05:32 AM   License: 저작자표시 2.0 대한민국

매년 12월 16일을 전후해서는 전세계 여러 도시에서 Creative Commons의 생일파티가 열립니다.
CC Korea는 그 파티에 "호프데이"라는 이름을 붙였구요. 원래는 그냥 술마시자는 HOFday 였다가 좀 더 의미부여가 되면서 HOPE day가 되었죠. ^^

호프데이는 한해동안 함께 활동했던 발룬티어들 및 우리와 함께 관련해서 활동했던 개인/커뮤니티/단체를 초청해서 한해를 마무리하자는 게 목적입니다. 해를 거듭할수록, 우리가 하는 일을 알리기보다는 우리가 추구하는 가치와 유사한 활동을 하는 곳들과의 네트워킹이 중요해지는 것 같습니다.

2007년 호프데이 http://www.creativecommons.or.kr/blog/article/35
2008년 호프데이 http://www.creativecommons.or.kr/blog/article/75


올해는 여러가지 형태의 지식공유 이벤트들이 많아졌다고 느낍니다. 이런 행사들의 특징이라고 한다면, 특정 조직에 의해서가 아니라 자발적인 참여로 이뤄지는 준비위원회와 커뮤니티에 의해 만들어지는 게 많아졌다는 것입니다. 소셜네트워킹 도구들이 작은 불씨들을 실체로 만들어내는 가능성을 높여주고 있구요.

이에, CC가 추구하는 가치인 "지식과 문화의 공유"를 위해 활동하고 있는 개인/커뮤니티/단체들과 함께 그 준비과정에 있었던 에피소드나 느낀점 등을 공유하는 자리를 함께 마련하고 싶습니다. 동기와 시초, 준비과정, 열린기획, 협업과 집단지성의 경험, 과정으로부터 배우게 된것, 이를 통해 얻은 것과 아쉬운 것 등의 경험을 공유해주시면, 또 한번 커뮤니티들이 성장하고 개선할 수 있는 기회를 얻게 될것 같아요.

그래서 이번 호프데이의 이름은 가칭 Hopeday for All 로 정해봤습니다. 더 많은 경험이 나눠질 수록 더 많은 희망들이 퍼져나갈 수 있을 거라고 믿습니다.
이 행사 자체도 열린 기획과 열린 참여로 만들어가고자 합니다. 준비 TFT 역시 함께 참여하시는 주체의 준비팀과 자원봉사자들로 구성할 예정입니다.


참여희망 대상

  • 지식과 문화의 공유를 위한 행사를 주최한 경험
  • 열린 기획, 열린 커뮤니티를 추구
  • 자원봉사/자원활동으로 행사준비한 경험
  • 소셜네트워킹/협업 도구들 활용

위의 항목 중 해당하는 사항이 있는 주체들의 참여를 바라고 있습니다.

2009년 호프데이 개요

  • 언제: 2009년 12월 17일(목) 7시부터
  • 어디: 홍대 클럽 TOOL
  • 목적
       1) 지식공유를 위해 준비했던 행사 주체로서 준비과정과 경험, 느낀점 공유
       2) 준비팀과 자원활동가, 자원봉사자들과의 연말파티
  • 참가방법
       A. 경험을 나눠주시고, 자원봉사자와 함께 오셔서 파티를 즐깁니다.
       B. 기획회의부터 참여해서 함께 이 행사를 만듭니다.


첫번째 기획준비회의 안내

  • 언제: 2009년 11월 27일(금) 7시
  • 어디: 서초역 1번출구 CC Korea (오퓨런스 빌딩 508호, 1층에 농협)
  • 회의내용:
    - 경험을 나누는 방법에 대해 찾아보고 고민하고 합의합니다.
    - 할일을 정의하고 나눕니다.
    - 각각의 준비팀의 노하우를 이번 행사에 반영하도록 노력합니다.


참여방법 안내

  • 준비팀에 참여하고 싶으신 분들은 아래 메일이나 트위로 댓글로 의사를 밝혀주시기 바랍니다.
  • 준비팀에는 참여하고자 하지만 첫번째 준비회의에는 참석하기 어려우신 분도 알려주세요
  • netstrolling (at) cckorea (dot) org
  • twitter @netstrolling

Videos der all2gethernow sind online

CC Germany, November 23, 2009 06:23 PM   License: Namensnennung 2.0 Deutschland

Nachdem mehr als zwei Monate ins Land gegangen sind, haben es die Videos der all2gethernow in aufbereiteter Form ins Netz geschafft. Bei Vimeo findet man nun also fast alle Sessions des großen “Zählraums” sowie Interviews und Statements einzelner Teilnehmer. Außerdem ist auch das Abschlusskonzert von Amanda Palmer dabei.

Eine der am stärksten frequentierten Sessions war “Werte 2.0 - Netzkultur vs Geistiges Eigentum”, die eine Brücke zwischen der c/o pop und der all2gethernow sein sollte:

a2n #camp: Werte 2.0 - Netzkultur vs. Geistiges Eigentum - Part 1 of 2 from all2gethernow on Vimeo.

Book of the Year, 2009

James Boyle, November 23, 2009 04:01 PM   License: Attribution 3.0 Unported

The American Society for Information Science and Technology has just named The Public Domain Book of the Year for 2009.  I am really honoured.

CC志愿者交流沙龙将于11月29日举行

CC China Mainland, November 23, 2009 03:42 PM   License: 署名 2.5 中国大陆

 

 知识共享中国大陆项目(CC China Mainland)一直致力于中国大陆版知识共享协议(creative commons licenses)的推广及研究工作,在不同领域以多种形式来推广CC理念。自2006年以来, 我们已经成功举办了包括C C 沙龙、C C 生日会、C C学术研讨会、C C摄影大赛等活动。众多志愿者的支持和贡献是这些活动顺利开展的重要保证。这些活动现场,总有CC的志愿者热情活跃的身影,而更多的CC的朋友则通过互联网及其他各种网络热情推广CC的理念和协议。

 为了加强CC志愿者之间的交流,吸纳更多有志于为推广CC服务的优秀志愿者加入CC志愿者团队,2009年11月29日知识共享中国大陆项目将组织CC志愿者交流沙龙活动,并同时启动CC志愿者计划。CC中国大陆项目将整合CC已有的志愿者团队,与CC的各种活动有机的结合起来,形成相对固定的团队制度,并希望通过这个计划将CC协议及其倡导的“share, remix, reuse—legally”推广到各地。

 届时,项目负责人王春燕老师、CC项目团队成员和新老志愿者将齐聚一堂,分享CC中国大陆项目和志愿者的精彩故事,探讨全社会对知识创造成果合法分享的理念和开放的知识产权保护观念,并介绍下一阶段CC在文化艺术和科学教育方面的推广计划和相关的志愿者活动内容。现场还将接受志愿者报名申请,派发CC T恤、项目手册、CC知识问答手册等。

我们欢迎CC的新老志愿者、一切关注并愿意参与知识合法分享的人届时前来,共享精彩,启动CC志愿行动。如欲参加请提前电话或发Email报名。

我们热情的邀请你加入CC ,CC知识共享中国大陆项目常年接受志愿者申请。您可根据CC知识共享中国大陆项目网站的信息,下载申请表格,填报CC志愿者申请表,然后通过电子信箱递交。

 

知识共享中国大陆项目志愿者沙龙

一, 沙龙时间:11月29日  下午 2:00-4:30

二, 沙龙地点:中国人民大学法学院 815会议室

三, 现场活动内容:

1  CC中国大陆项目及相关推广活动介绍

2  分享CC志愿者的精彩瞬间:CC中国和志愿者—精彩共享

3  CC志愿者计划内容介绍

4  志愿者代表感言

5  项目组成员、志愿者大家谈 

6 “混合与分享”CC综合艺术展(12月13日)志愿者动员

 

CC志愿者申请表  点击下载

Email 至:hexiaolin@cn.creativecommons.org

联系人: 和晓琳 13466687857 

 

CCIT2009: sabato 28 Novembre 2009 a Torino

CC Italy, November 23, 2009 09:16 AM   License: Attribuzione-Condividi allo stesso modo 2.5 Italia

Nel contesto della Conferenza Annuale del Centro NEXA su Internet & Società, che avrà luogo a Torino sabato 28 novembre 2009, si terrà una sessione dedicata allo stato di Creative Commons in Italia, riprendendo la consuetudine annuale degli incontri "CCIT". In serata, si terrà il CC Party.

Sabato, 28 Novembre 2009, ore 10-18
Centro Congressi "Torino Incontra", Via Nino Costa 8

leggi tutto

headphonica leidet unter Cybersquatting

CC Germany, November 20, 2009 10:16 PM   License: Namensnennung 2.0 Deutschland

Das 2006 gegründete Netlabel headphonica ist vor Kurzem Opfer einer seltsamen Domainübernahme geworden. Nun wird ihre alte Seite von den neuen Domainbesitzern - inklusive Teilen der insgesamt 80 bisherigen cc-lizenzierten Releases - weitgehend unverändert weiterbetrieben und wurde den Headphonica-Gründern zum Rückkauf angeboten.

Wer sich rechtlich an dem Fall versuchen möchte, ist hiermit herzlich dazu aufgerufen (Kontaktdaten am Ende der Seite), vor allem aber ist dies ein Aufruf an alle, ihre alten Links zur headphonica-Seite auf deren neue Domain headphonica.com zu ändern.

Hier ist die ganze Geschichte:

Wir dachten, wir seien “kleine Fische” und hätten es bei unserem geplanten Providerwechsel vor knapp einem Monat nicht für möglich gehalten, dass wir als unkommerzielles Netlabel die Aufmerksamkeit von Domaingrabbern (eigentlich “Cybersquatting”) erregen könnten. Doch unsere bisherige Domain www.headphonica.net war von einem auf den anderen Tag neu registriert - aber nicht von uns.

Interessant dabei: die Struktur unserer Webseite wurde perfekt kopiert, vermutlich per “web scraping” [http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scraper_Site - aufgrund des Alters der Links, muss der "Scrape" vor ca. 2 Jahren stattgefunden haben]. Darüber hinaus enthält die Seite Teile unseres Contents, konkret auch unsere eigene Musik die wir unter Creative Commons veröffentlicht haben, allerdings ohne Hinweis auf die Lizenz. Weil der Neu-Eigentümer von uns 200 $ haben wollte, um uns die Domain zurück zu übertragen, haben wir beschlossen auf www.headphonica.com umzuziehen. Äußerst perfide und Teil dieser Erpressungstaktik ist es, dass auch das Kontaktformular mit übernommen wurde - über das wir bisher die meisten Demos (Demotapes) bekommen haben.

Der neue Provider der Seite meinte, wir sollten auf das Angebot des Neu-Eigentümers eingehen und hat offenbar keinerlei rechtliche Bedenken. Dass die Musik unter Creative Commons veröffentlicht wurde und bei Weiterverbreitung immer die Lizenz mit angegeben werden muß (Absatz 4, Unterabsatz a) läßt den Seitenbetreiber dabei kalt. Wir hätten ja eigentlich nichts einzuwenden gegen die Weiterverbreitung der Musik - grundsätzlich ist das ja genau unser Ziel - dennoch ist die Absicht hinter der Webseite headphonica.net offenbar nicht das Verbreiten von schöner Musik, sondern einzig und allein, uns Labelbetreiber mit der gefakten Seite zu erpressen.

Auch das wäre nicht weiter schlimm, weil es technisch kein Problem war, umzuziehen und wir das neue Seitendesign schon vorher vorbereitet hatten. Allerdings zeigen alle Links die in den letzten Jahren irgendwo hinterlassen wurden auf headphonica.net - entsprechend hoch ist der page-rank bei Google im Vergleich zu www.headphonica.com. Wir haben mittlerweile alle Links auf die wir Zugriff haben, zb. in Social Networks usw., auf headphonica.com umgestellt. Trotzdem gibt es da draußen etliche Links die wir nicht beeinflussen können.

Wer dies hier liest und irgendwann mal auf headphonica.net verlinkt hat, sei hiermit gebeten den Link nach www.headphonica.com zu korrigieren - Vielen Dank! Bitte auch keine neuen Links auf headphonica.net anlegen.

Kontakt zu Martin Enderlein & Co. siehe http://www.headphonica.com/?page_id=3

To Shoot An Elephant, CC BY-SA Documentary, Wins Award at Festival dei Popoli

Creative Commons, November 20, 2009 09:41 PM   License: Attribution 3.0 Unported

genesis_DARK_logoLast week To Shoot An Elephant, a CC Attribution-Share Alike licensed documentary on life in the Gaza Strip, won the award for “Most Innovative Filmmaker” at Florence’s Festival dei Popoli. From the voting committee:

“After we watched this film we engaged in a long passionate discussion. This film never left us. We want to award the filmmakers for sharing with us an emotional, physical and stressful experience for being there and witnessing the horrors and destruction of the siege imposed on the Gaza Strip earlier this year.”

It is wonderful to see open source cinema receive these types of accolades, solidifying its place in the larger film landscape. Congratulations to film-makers Alberto Arce and Mohammed Rujailah on their win! You can learn more about To Shoot An Elephant at their website.

WikiEducator, Connexions, and MediaWiki join forces in OER Remix Project

Creative Commons, November 20, 2009 07:48 PM   License: Attribution 3.0 Unported

In case you haven’t heard, WikiEducator’s Wayne Mackintosh announced earlier this week that they were joining forces with Connexions “to provide educators with greater freedom of choice to mix and match the best of two OER worlds, namely “producer-consumer” models with more traditional work flow approaches and commons-based peer production.” WikiEducator and Connexions are two collaborative OER projects that use Creative Commons licenses. While WikiEducator, licensed CC BY-SA, focuses “on building capacity in the use of Mediawiki and related free software technologies for mass-collaboration in the authoring of free content,” Connexions, licensed CC BY, focuses on the collaborative development, sharing, and publishing of modular educational content that can be easily integrated into larger collections or courses. According to the announcement, the two projects will partner “to build import export capability between the Connexions and WikiEducator/Mediawiki platforms.”

It’s definitely exciting to see these two OER projects working together, especially since the collaboration is being generously funded by a grant from one of our own biggest supporters, the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation. There are various ways you can tune into its progress, including visiting the project planning node, subscribing to the Connexions mailing list, or helping them develop use case scenarios.

First meeting on Public Domain Calculators (10-11 november)

COMMUNIA, November 20, 2009 03:54 AM   License: Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported

As part of its on-going activities, COMMUNIA is now hosting a series of meetings devoted to Public Domain Calculators - a task carried by the Working Group on Mapping the Public Domain.

The goal of such workshops is to try to determine whether or not a given work is under copyright in a given EU jurisdiction. The first meeting was co-organized by the Open Knowledge Foundation in association with the Centre for Intellectual Property and Information Law at the University of Cambridge, UK.

The purpose of this workshop - held at the University of Cambridge on 10-11 November - was to produce materials such as legal flow charts and public domain “algorithms” which will help with the representation of different national copyright laws and the determination of public domain status. [20nov09]

read more

CC board chair Esther Wojcicki on teachers sharing … and supporting CC

Creative Commons, November 19, 2009 11:21 PM   License: Attribution 3.0 Unported

Esther Wojcicki, Chair of the Creative Commons board of directors, has insightful comments on a recent New York Times story on teachers selling lessons online. Esther’s column in the Huffington Post closes with:

While it is an interesting alternative for teachers to have the option of selling their lesson plans, realistically the culture of teachers nationwide is one of sharing, not selling.

How true! Read the whole column, which also includes a good overview of available open educational resources.

Also, our entire board is making a public committment to raise funds for our campaign this year. We’re rolling out “personal campaign pages” for board members, where they explain why they are personally commited to CC and ask you to help them support us. Check out Esther’s campaign page and support Creative Commons today. Currently your contribution will be doubled by WhippleHill, a communications company that shares our values of openness and innovation on the web, with a particular focus on education.

Reunión en Loja Ecuador

CC Mexico, November 19, 2009 10:00 PM   License: Atribución 2.5 México

Con el fin de fomentar el uso de las Licencias Creative Commons, entre sus miembros se celebrará en la ciudad de Loja la II reunión de líderes latinoamericanos Creative Commons Latam 2009, del 25 al 27 de noviembre en la Universidad Técnica Particular de Loja (UTPL), de forma paralela al ...

Remembering Babel: Open Data Sharing & Integration

Science Commons, November 19, 2009 09:19 PM   License: Attribution 3.0 Unported

Since the release of CC0, I’ve been talking to many people about when and how to use it. A group of scientists and science policy experts recently endorsed public domain data sharing, and the use of CC0 to do so, in a letter to Nature. This is a significant affirmation of our approach to data sharing. But a question that inevitably arises in many discussions is: What about data providers that are unable or unwilling to commit their data to the public domain? Will Creative Commons support providing a flexible set of licensing options, intermediate between public domain, on the one hand, and full control (secrecy), on the other?

First, I have to clarify what I mean by “data” in this discussion. “Data” by itself can mean anything, including music, movies, pictures, and other things that are clearly copyrightable. But in this discussion, I will use the term “data” in a narrower and more specific sense:  we mean facts, ideas, and concepts that are not copyrightable by themselves. An example would be Einstein’s E=MC^2 equation, the height of Mount Everest, or the coordinates of a particular star. The unprotected status of these data was affirmed in Feist Publications vs. Rural Telephone Service, where the U.S. Supreme Court found that originality is a basic Constitutional prerequisite for copyright to exist, or as Justice O’Conner, writing for the majority, said: “It is this bedrock principle of copyright that … No one may claim originality as to facts.” (emphasis added) The U.S Copyright Act further codifies this principle as a limitation on the scope of copyright protection (at Section 102(b)). Likewise, other countries recognize this limitation in their originality requirements.

This basic limitation on the scope copyright acknowledges that copyright is inherently a social compromise between the desire to reward authors for creative output and the need to protect a reservoir of facts and ideas available for everyone to draw upon. Without this “commons” of facts and ideas, social discourse and creativity would suffer. As Lawrence Lessig writes, in The Future of Ideas, “”Free resources have been crucial to innovation and creativity… without them, creativity is crippled. Thus, and especially in the digital age, the central question becomes not whether government or the market should control a resource, but whether a resource should be controlled at all. Just because control is possible, it doesn’t follow that it is justified. Instead, in a free society, the burden of justification should fall on him who would defend systems of control.”

And yet, over time, copyright control has expanded dramatically in scope and duration, straining this delicate social compromise. Ironically, it is the growth and success of the Internet, with its extraordinary power and freedom, that has spurred renewed interest in extending copyright-like controls even beyond the traditional realms of copyright itself. Databases containing myriad facts and ideas, once considered public domain if shared publicly, are now the subject of efforts to create new systems of control. In Europe, by E.U. Directive, countries have implemented “sui generis” database rights that protect databases and their contents even if they are too unoriginal to merit copyright protection. Other countries grant copyright protection to databases under relaxed copyright standards that demand less than full originality or creativity.

Finally, there are attempts to create systems of control based on contract law (like click-wrap agreements, Web site terms of use, etc.), premised not on the existence of any copyright or statutory right, but merely on voluntary agreement. Contracts can expand copyright-like controls well beyond the boundaries of traditional copyright or even sui generis protections, and indeed have no inherent limits other than the enforceability of the agreement (which can be problematic in itself). Not only do such contracts apply to uncopyrightable data, but they can also impose controls on data already otherwise in the public domain, since the issue is not the status of the data but whether you consented to abide by a contract. A recent example is the Open Data Commons’ Open Database License (ODbL), which is being considered for adoption by the OpenStreetMap community, among others. The Open Data Commons not only has been a strong supporter and advocate for open data sharing, but it has provided important community tools, including the Public Domain Dedication and License (PDDL). But unlike the previously released PDDL, the new ODbL contains attribution and share-alike obligations, among other requirements. Its terms and conditions are imposed on copyright or sui generis database rights, but it also purports to act as a contract in the absence of these protections. As a result, it attempts to impose obligations on data that even copyright and sui generis rights do not reach.

With CC0, Creative Commons has chosen to take a different approach (or rather, to stick with an approach similar to the PDDL). CC0 is a way to give up controls and dedicate data to the public domain (or as close to it as we can legally achieve). As I have explained elsewhere, we were concerned about the practical impact of “attribution stacking” and license compatibility problems for data sharing communities. Attribution stacking can burden large-scale data sharing projects that draw on many sources and license compatibility problems can shut down data integration efforts altogether.

In science, an area that I focus on, sharing data in the public domain is in fact part of a long and honored tradition. Before the Internet, data was published, if at all, in journals in print. The articles themselves may be copyrightable, but the facts and ideas revealed there were presumed to be in the public domain. Only with the advent of the Internet and digital technology has there been interest in “licensing” contents of databases including such facts and ideas. Thus, where there is an established tradition of public domain data sharing that has worked well for a community–and continues to work well– any new system of control must meet a high burden of justification. But based on our experiences with other licensing schemes, we know that such controls carry risks. Even a simple requirement like attribution, when aggregated over thousands or millions of data elements, can become a very serious burden. Scientists should provide attribution (and citation) for valid scientific reasons, and no legal requirement may be flexible enough to replace common sense or professional judgment, an important ingredient in deciding what to attribute and how. In addition, license incompatibility problems, which are especially relevant with share-alike licenses, can prevent databases or data sources from being combined or integrated or data from being reused. All of this can have a negative impact on the usability of scientific data.

In light of such risks, what could justify departures from the public domain? One argument, made to me eloquently by several data project organizers, is that unless we grant providers the flexibility to impose some controls–rather than none–they will be reluctant or unwilling to grant any access. And even restricted sharing, with some conditions, is better than no sharing at all. Further, they argue that some extremely valuable data sets might fall into this category, because the more valuable the data, the less likely it is that someone would consider simply releasing it into the public domain. And so by not offering a graduated system of controls, like the CC suite of copyright licenses, important opportunities to share are being missed, with serious consequences for those communities and perhaps for all of us. I have to admit that it’s a powerful argument against being too dogmatically attached to the public domain, and if true, it might justify other approaches.

At issue is whether more data would be made available under a more restrictive system than the public domain and to what extent those restrictions impair the value of that data to the community. I don’t think we know the answer fully yet. It’s a question that undoubtedly deserves more research by sociologists and other scholars, based on empirical evidence. But, when in doubt, what should be done? I come back to Lessig’s admonition that, “the burden of justification should fall on him who would defend systems of control.” I think the best that can be said for more restrictive systems of sharing data is “not yet proven.” And that’s why we will continue to advocate public domain and CC0 for data sharing.

Mr. Mayo’s Class Integrates CC, Skypes with Lawrence Lessig

Creative Commons, November 19, 2009 05:52 PM   License: Attribution 3.0 Unported

mr mayo
Photo by Mr. Mayo CC BY-NC

A few weeks ago, I had the chance to talk to George Mayo, known as Mr. Mayo to his students, a middle school Language Arts teacher in Maryland. Mr. Mayo was brought to CC Learn’s attention by Lawrence Lessig, CC’s founder and current board member, who Skyped with Mr. Mayo’s class for thirty minutes, answering questions on copyright, YouTube’s take-down policy and downloading music. Mr. Mayo and his class have integrated CC licensed works into their daily activities, documenting it all at mrmayo.org. Instead of elaborating on the various innovative ways Mr. Mayo and his class uses CC, I’m going to let George speak for himself. The following is the interview I had with him via Skype. You can also listen to the audio here.

You were originally brought to our attention by Larry, who said he spoke to your classroom for half an hour about copyright and Creative Commons. And putting aside the fact that it’s awesome that you got half an hour of his attention, what is it that you teach and that spurred you to set up this first conversation with Larry?

Yeah, that was really cool that he gave us that much time; it was so nice of him to do that, and the way that he interacted with the kids was really awesome; he really took them seriously and gave very thoughtful responses. But what I teach this year–I’m a language arts teacher, but this year I’m teaching a film and literacy class. So it’s kind of a cool thing for middle schoolers to be able to take. My district is offering it and basically, we watch films and we make our own short films. And it’s all geared around kids building literacy skills through studying and making their own films.

So do they actually shoot their own films? Or do they use material that’s online and remix it, or do a little bit of both?

Right now, they shoot their own films. They have cameras and Apple laptops. The remixing part–I would like to; I have an after school club where we make stop motion films and we sort of mess around with some remixing in that club.

Do you encourage them to use Creative Commons licensed soundtracks or images or anything like that?

I do. That’s where, particular last year, as we started making films and I knew about all of the wealth of content online that you could use through Creative Commons, I started opening up all those resources to my students. So we’ve been using ccMixter and we use Freesound quite a bit, and so we basically tap into all those resources under the Creative Commons licenses, so it really just opens up just an amazing amount of resources. Like we drop in all this different music and sound effects, [and] it really helps the kids a lot and on their projects.

That’s really cool! So you’ve been doing that for the past year?

Yeah, I did that all last year. And even before that, as a language arts teacher, we were kind of experimenting with some of these resources, but really heavily over the last year.

How did you as a–you’re a middle school teacher right? You teach seventh and eight grades?

Right now I’m teaching sixth and seventh grade.

So how did you, as a middle school teacher, become aware of Creative Commons and decide to incorporate that into your film class?

Well one of the things is, as a teacher I was pretty confused about copyright, and when we first started making movies before I even started teaching the film class, I knew that we were using copyrighted material in some of our projects, and I just wasn’t sure what the rules were. And so as I started learning about Creative Commons I thought, as a way to learn more myself, we would start looking into it as a whole class.

So it was kind of a learning process together?

Exactly, yeah. I know we were making these video projects and posting them online, and I didn’t want to model inappropriate copyright, so I thought, well we’ll look into Creative Commons. And I just started learning more, and when you start looking into it you realize how easy it is and the wealth of resources that are out there at your fingertips. You know, it becomes really advantageous for the teacher to figure it out because the kids really get into it, it makes their projects better, and it helps us all learn about these issues of copyright. So I got into it because I wanted to learn about it, and I wanted to open up these resources for my students.

What are some of the resources that you started with and that were the most help to you?

The main one we used–last year there were two, there was ccMixter.org and there was another one called Freesound. And this year with Freesound… all last year, we took a lot of content from these websites–we just took and took. And this year we though it would be interesting if we added some to these sites as well. So we have a classroom Freesound account called “Pay Attention”, and we capture free sounds around our school with this nice digital recorder and we upload them to the account. So we’re trying to get the kids to understand that these are online communities where you take stuff, but it’s also really good to contribute content. So we’re making a point this year to rate the sounds in the songs as we download them to give feedback to the artists who uploaded them, and then we’re adding our own content that people are really downloading–we have some sounds that have been downloaded dozens of times, which the kids–they see that and they’re like wow, we’re part of this community.

Yeah, a community of sharing. That’s really cool, so how do you guys decide which license to upload your own content under?

Well the movies that we make, the stop motion movies, in the stop motion club called Longfellow Ten, those are all Creative Commons Attribution 3.0.

Ok, Attribution Only (CC BY), yeah.

And, however, with the stop motion, I like to change that to where there can be remix and mash-ups. However, movies where the kids are in it themselves, those are “all rights reserved” because they’re middle school students and we kind of just keep “all rights reserved” on those. But how are the sounds that we upload–[they] are sampling plus 1.0 license so they can take them, do anything they want, remix them, mash up, whatever.

So I guess when the kids are engaging in these projects, remixing, etc., where does the discussion about licensing and copyright issues come in? Do they see that ccMixter has Creative Commons licensed music and go, hey that icon is Creative Commons licensed music–what’s that? And you kind of go over it with them? How does that discussion come in?

Basically, it’s really just kind of a discussion that goes on all year. Creative Commons content and copyright is a discussion that we have throughout the whole school year. I have printed out some large Creative Commons posters that you guys make available on your site (which are really nice classroom posters), so we have this up and as the kids are downloading songs that they want to use, we have a format that makes sure they attribute the artist, that they cite the exact URL, that they cite the title of the track and the licensing status it’s licensed under. So they really learn about it by doing it. I don’t stand up there and lecture to them, but by going through the process they really get a grasp on the license and how it works. And why–the idea that artists want to share their stuff.

So they have an idea of–if it weren’t for the Creative Commons license the artists wouldn’t be able to share legally? Do you talk about how restrictive copyright naturally is? Or, have you gone over that with them?

Yeah, that comes up a lot because they don’t quite understand that you can’t take a 50 cent song or something and just drop it into your video.

They just do it anyway.

Yeah, and they do do it anyway because a lot of these kids are posting all kinds of content online as everybody knows, and then I’ll say, have you guys had YouTube videos taken down? And they’ll all raise their hands. And those are some questions we had for Professor Lessig.

Wow, so a lot of them have uploaded on YouTube and have gotten their stuff taken down?

Yeah, they’re all completely familiar with having videos taken down and it’s because of copyright. Some of the questions for Lessig were, you know, how are the filters on YouTube? How do they work? How does YouTube catch this? And the problems with that, and how the filters are distinguished between different types of use. So that’s another thing that’s interesting with the discussions of copyright is [that] the kids are really interested; they want to know what the rules are and they don’t know. Like particularly when one of the questions was can I take a song on iTunes and use it in a movie and upload it to YouTube, you know, again, underneath fair use there are ways you can do that, but generally, no, you really can’t. And then a lot of questions–when you talk about these issues of copyright, they’re really interested in this because, I mean they’re all using this. They’re using the website and uploading content all over the place, but they have sort of a–not a clear idea of what the rules are.

So do you find that once they–over the process of the year that they’ve been learning more and more about Creative Commons and copyright law–that once they know more about it, they start following the law more and they don’t post 50 cent videos up onto YouTube?

I think they do, and I know I’ve had some students who tell me, oh in our videos now we’re using ccMixter songs–you know, on our videos we’re making on our own at home. So a lot of this, it’s transferring to what they’re doing outside of the classroom. In my class, they can’t, I mean they have to use, they have to follow the copyright rules. But outside, I know from a few students who have told me that, they’re taking what they learn and they’re applying it to what they’re doing on their own.

So do you think that was kind of the biggest barrier to sixth and seventh graders (like breaking the law before)–[that] they just didn’t know about it?

I don’t think they had an idea. You know, even as a teacher, as far as fair use, it seems kind of complicated… I know talking to other teachers and being online and seeing what teachers say about this topic–even teachers are confused by it, so students are as well.

Yeah… I think everyone in general is confused about copyright and fair use.

But if they use Creative Commons it’s so simple. It just kind of bypasses all that complexity and it’s so clear.

Have you focused on any of the international aspects of Creative Commons? Because our licenses are global, so have you found that your students have been interacting with media from other countries or connecting even with video makers or video clips that were made in other countries under a Creative Common license? And if they have, what they think about that?

We’ve done projects in our classroom where we collaborated with students from other countries. We have projects that we’ve done but not directly related to Creative Commons. It’s very, very likely that the content they’ve downloaded is from countries besides the United States, but they don’t–that’s not something that they are actively sort of recognizing.

Right. What are these projects that are international projects?

Well we did one last year, actually a year and a half ago where we wrote a Twitter story. One classroom got the Twitter account and wrote a chapter, and then I sent it off to the next classroom and when it was done we had over a hundred kids in six different countries who added to the whole story. And then we published it as a little book and it was 140 posts total, so it was a cute little science fiction story.

So it’s kind of a story game where each student contributes a Twitter?

Yeah, but like in each classroom would be a chapter. So each classroom had 5-10 students and they would write, and we would get done with that chapter in a day and we would ship it off to the next class, and then they would add a chapter and figure out where the story goes. And it was at the 140th entry that was the ending.

So how did you coordinate among the different schools? Did you set this up beforehand, contact the schools and say we should all have Twitter accounts and do this? Or…

No it was really just on the fly, totally. Actually, we were sitting around at lunch and we came up with the idea and we sent it out, and I was talking with the teachers on Twitter… somebody in Canada, this teacher in Canada, grabbed the next chapter. We actually had like kids in England, China even, we had kids in China, like all over the place! And then another project we did recently, like a year or so ago, was the mini voices for Darfur–like March 6th we declared it Darfur day and we invited students from all over the place to come and comment on efforts to raise awareness about genocide. And we had almost 700 comments within a 24 hour period.

And this was on Twitter?

This wasn’t on Twitter; we used Twitter heavily to sort of promote it…

Was this on your blog?

Yeah, it’s on my blog.

Where is the Twitter Sci-fi story located? Is that on your blog as well?

It is, and it’s still up.

Are you planning to have any other projects kind of like that? Like another Twitter project–it might not be a Sci-fi story, it might be something else.

Yeah, I’m always open. Like one thing on my mind lately that I thought would be really interesting is to do a collaborative–and I’m just thinking middle school–is to do a remix project. I saw this thing online, following Creative Commons, and it was Infinity–you had artists create a picture, and musicians grab the picture and add a loop, soundtrack to it. This year it would be neat to do some sort of remix collaboration project where we upload all this content and everybody grabs it and remixes each others content as a way of teaching about Creative Commons and the whole idea of remixing. That’s kind of what’s floating in my mind lately and I have a couple teachers who seem like they would be interested.

One of the things I’ve always done with my projects is I make it super, super easy. Like lower the barrier to participating and just make it so stripped down and easy for people to participate so they can–I mean that’s why some of the projects have worked well, because people can jump in and it’s not very complicated. It’s very clear cut.

So have you found that your students are pretty adept at using the Internet and Web 2.0 tools? For them to just jump in and Twitter? Do your students come from a background where they have computers at home?

Yeah, many of my students, this year they do. Like in the past as a Language Arts teacher we used lots of blogs and wikis. When I’m just teaching this film class we share many of our movies online on a blog, but the kids aren’t actively blogging themselves in this video class. In the past I’ve had all my kids blogging, they’ve had individual blogs and stuff, but with the film class we’re just focusing on the movies and we share our movies on one collective blog.

So have you come across students that aren’t as comfortable with technology? And if you have, how have you dealt with their skills?

Well, yeah, there seems to be… even just going on ccMixter, downloading a song and putting it on a flash drive, putting it into the Mac and grabbing the song–just simple things like that, some kids aren’t quite clear on some of those things. And since we’re all together, we’re all sort of learning and doing this, you find that kids help each other, and the kids that don’t quite have a grasp on some of the things we’re doing quickly learn by watching and being helped by other students.

So I guess, going back to your Skype conversation with Lawrence Lessig, I was wondering about your students’ reactions to Larry. After they finished interviewing him, what did they think about Larry? Did they feel like they got their questions answered?

Well, I think they were really proud of themselves because you know he had answered the question and there wasn’t any sort of playing around, and I think it helped clarify some of the issues. I mean one thing that stood out–they had a lot of questions about peer to peer file sharing sites and they’re not clear why that’s illegal, and then Mr. Lessig spent some time talking to them about that. I think that overall, they felt really good about the conversation. That was the last week… We haven’t had a lot of reflection time with that particular class (yet) but I know things went well. We had a bunch of students come in from other classes to watch that, [and] the principal was in it. I thought we had a really good conversation and the students felt good about it. Mr. Lessig was really awesome with the way he talked to and treated them.

What do you consider was the most interesting student question and answer from Larry?

I thought the questions about the filters on YouTube and how that can start to restrict–he was mentioning if the content industry has their way, YouTube would have heavy filters that would really limit the YouTube as we know it now. We were interested in that, and then another thing that I was really surprised by is their questions about peer to peer file sharing. Because they all used the site, they all use various peer to peer file sharing sites to basically download copyrighted content, and they weren’t aware that was really illegal, so that really helped them clarify that for them.

What did Larry say about that?

Well, he said–another question was, why are these sites allowed to exist if everybody’s using them illegally? And he kind of clarified how peer to peer file sharing sites can be used legally. I mean, if you’re downloading CC licensed content, you can do that. And he went up and talked about how these make it possible for artists to sort of distribute their content to a larger number of people, and he explained how the supreme court said these sites are allowed to exist, even though as a tool people are using them for illegal things, he said the tool itself is not an illegal tool.

So this is kind of off topic, or it’s more about yourself, because I remember middle school teachers–I remember when I was in middle school myself, and I hated it, because you know, middle school is just known as the age when students are not at their best, and I was wondering what in the world made you want to be a middle school teacher? Because you’re obviously really involved with your kids and really involved with copyright and Creative Commons issues and what made you, I guess, want to be a middle school teacher first of all and second of all, to delve into these issues with your students? I mean, for instance, do you have any background in your schooling with open issues or copyright issues?

I don’t, actually. I was actually a construction worker and a truck driver for a number of years. I dropped out of college. And I always wanted to be a teacher so I went back to night school for like a number of years. In San Diego I got my teaching degree. So I come to teaching after having a lot of other jobs. I just always wanted to do it.

And middle school–I don’t know what it is, I really like teaching middle school students. I have a sub this week, I was talking to him yesterday and he was telling me how hard middle school is, you have to deal with behavior issues and it’s kind of a tough age group. But it’s really–something about middle school appeals to me. It’s kind of crazy, you never know–you know the kids are going through so many different changes, and there’s so much psychology involved, and sort of like getting the problem students and the good students and making everything move along. It’s kind of just mentally appealing. And also I like the creative aspect, where you can do all these creative things, you have a lot of room to sort of do out-of-the-box types of things. If they see that the kids are engaged and learning the content, you really can kind of go out there and do some kind of crazy stuff, so it’s kind of open in that regard. So we have a lot of fun and do some kind of nutty, you know, just projects that are a little unusual sometimes.

Reflecting back to your own middle school experience, how would you compare yourself with the kids of this generation? Do you think they’re all that different from you? Do you think they’re much more–obviously the Internet just recently took off–has that made things different about the way you teach and the way you were taught in middle school?

I don’t even remember. I mean I can remember one or two of my middle school teachers. I don’t remember anything particularly that I learned or like what I was–

I don’t either.

I think it’s sort of a gray area, the whole experience of middle school. I remember being really awkward and skinny and self conscious. And I was in Texas and we were still using typewriters. We didn’t have computers when I graduated from high school–there weren’t even computers yet in the buildings really. So I mean it’s just so different now. The kids today–all they know is the Internet, they grew up with it. So not a lot of parallels I don’t think, and I sort of blacked out my middle school years, to tell you the truth.

They were too traumatic. Do you think your kids are awkward too at this age? Or do you think they’re a little bit more well adjusted than we were?

I guess a little bit of everything?

What do you think the value of them learning about Creative Commons now and copyright issues will be for their future?

Well, I think as they–I think these are skills that are worthwhile knowing as they move on. ‘Cause the whole world is sort of going into this Web 2.0 and everybody is sharing and adding content, and I guess as Mr. Lessig was saying, “the Read Write Web,” so it’s good to have them understand these basic issues of copyright and to open up the world of Creative Commons to them. So I just think that it will be helpful to them as they go through knowing that they have all these resources and that they can sort of–what they make and create can be added to all the content that’s out there. They’re not just consumers, as Mr. Lessig would say, they’re artists themselves.

What advice would you have for other teachers? A lot of teachers are in the dark about copyright and Creative Commons just as you and I probably were a few years ago. What advice would you have for them to incorporate that kind of education into their classrooms and why should they do so?

mr mayo
Photo by Mr. Mayo CC BY-NC

I think why is just to show their students how much great resources are out there for them to use. That’s a great entry point. And also if they’re doing a project, like many classrooms now are doing multimedia projects, it’s worth the teacher’s effort to go to a site like Freesound.org, which is a really great community for classrooms because it’s a very–it’s middle school safe as far as being appropriate. If you find one of these sites that have Creative Commons content and just allow your students to investigate it for possibilities of sound effects and music to use in their multimedia projects, it doesn’t even have to be music. Obviously, Archive.org has all these resources, so I think it’s very much in the teacher’s interest to open up the doors for the students to see this stuff, and I mean it’s just so easy. Right click, download, download, I mean you can grab this stuff so quickly that it’s just crazy not to allow kids the access to this content… It’s a good entryway into starting a conversation about copyright.

Harnessing Openness in Higher Education

COMMUNIA, November 19, 2009 05:41 PM   License: Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported

A new report from CED on improving Research, Teaching and Learning in colleges & universities. [19nov09]

read more

Indaba Launch CC BY Loop Library, Contest With Filter Magazine

Creative Commons, November 19, 2009 03:30 PM   License: Attribution 3.0 Unported

Filter929x240FINALIndaba Music just launched a fantastic new clip library of over 8,000 CC Attribution licensed sounds and loops. Already one of the premier destination for musicians to collaborate online, their new clip library adds to Indaba’s appeal by offering an easy and legal way for musicians to add sounds and loops to their work.

To celebrate, Indaba has teamed up with Filter Magazine on a remix contest, challenging Indaba’s community of over 300,000 (!) musicians to create an original track that includes a minimum of two clips. The contest winner, determined by Filter Magazine, will be profiled in an upcoming issue as well as have their winning track featured in the issue’s monthly digital sampler. The due date for entries is December 8th at 5PM EST.

“Abre” y los textos sin fronteras

CC Guatemala, November 19, 2009 03:22 PM   License: Reconocimiento 3.0 Guatemala


Felicitamos a la Red Iberoamericana de TICs y Educación por la publicación de “Abre”, el boletín virtual que es una ventana abierta a las diversas actuaciones y realidades que conforman la Red. A través de esta nueva plataforma se pretende difundir las lineas de actuación que van surgiendo y a su vez ofrecer contenidos y recursos relacionados con las TICS desde el ámbito educativo y de la cooperación. El título elegido para Abre 0, Textos sin fronteras, hace referencia a la necesidad de abrir el conocimiento y derribar las barreras que limitan el libre acceso al conocimiento.

Pueden descargarlo acá: http://www.riate.org/boletin.php

CC - Deutscher Bundestag

CC Luxembourg, November 19, 2009 12:19 PM   License: Paternité 3.0 Luxembourg


Die neueste Veröffentlichung der Wissenschaftlichen Dienste des Deutschen Bundestages finden Sie im Internet-Angebot des wissenschaftlichen Dienstes des Deutschen Bundestages:

 

Creative Commons
http://www.bundestag.de/dokumente/analysen/2009/creative_commons.pdf

 

Queensland Museum - adding to the free photo movement

CC Australia, November 19, 2009 07:58 AM   License: Attribution-Share Alike 2.1 Australia


Three women going to the opera, Bert Roberts early 1900, Queensland Museum, Creative Commons License

We've posted before about the growing movement for cultural institutions across the globe to provide open online access to public domain images in their collections. And Australian institutions have been up there in the thick of the charge - the Powerhouse Museum, for example, was the second institution worldwide to join the Flickr Commons initiative, and has now been joined by four other Australian institutions. As a result the public can access archives they may otherwise never have seen by using only the click of a mouse.

Now the Queensland Museum has joined the party, uploading a test batch of 20 high resolution images from their collection for free online access. But what makes this initiative particularly interesting that it's being conducted in collaboration with Wikimedia Australia and they've chosen to upload the photos to Wiki Commons, rather than Flickr Commons.
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One of the benefits of using Wiki Commons is that, as the official media archive for the Wikimedia community, it makes it easier (and hence hopefully more likely) that related articles will be written on Wikipedia - the fourth most visited site on the internet - and linked back to the photos and the museum. The Flickr Commons images can be used in this way too, but this requires someone taking the extra step of uploading them to Wiki Commons - potentially slowing the process, and giving the museum less control over how the objects are described on the Wikimedia site.

To quote David Milne, Manager of Strategic Learning at the Queensland Museum, in his post about the initiative:

An advantage that using Wikimedia has over other photo hosting sites, such as FLICKR, is that Wikipedia articles can be written or linked to the photo subject matter. New information unearthed by Wikimedia researchers since posting the photographs has been invaluable. However, monitoring usage and repurposing of free media files on Wiki Commons can be a challenge.

As for the images themselves - they feature a sample of the museum's collection of photos by Bert Roberts, a local amateur photographer from the late 19th century. As such, the original images are in the public domain - although, in another interesting move, the Queensland Museum have asserted copyright over the digitised images, releasing them under a Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike licence. This could be controversially, as the Wikimedia community are currently arguing with the UK's National Portrait Gallery about rights over digitised versions of public domain images. I posted about the legal questions surrounding this debate on the Collections Australia blog a few weeks ago.

But, legal questions aside, as the comments on David's post show the reaction from the Australian museums and Wikimedia communities has been great. We even understand there will be a story about it on ABC Local Gold Coast this Friday.

Congratulations to the Queensland Museum for taking this first (but important) step. The photographs have been released as a trial in an effort to better share Australia’s cultural heritage by enabling others to appreciate what life was like in early 20th century Queensland. It is hopefully only the beginning of Australia's national institutions sharing our history and we look forward to seeing many positive benefits spring from this release.

This post was written with CCau volunteer Kelsey Lancaster.

Open Design met CC-licentie

CC Netherlands, November 18, 2009 04:14 PM   License: Naamsvermelding 3.0 Nederland

De (Un)limited Design expositie is van 12 november tot 10 januari 2010 te zien bij ProtoSpace in Utrecht. Oorspronkelijk was deze expositie, gemaakt door Featuring in Amsterdam, te zien in het Gaslab van de TU/e tijdens de Dutch Design Week, als afsluiting van de (Un)limited Design Contest, georganiseerd door Premsela en Waag Society in samenwerking met Creative Commons Nederland en de Nederlandse Fablabs. De expositie toont Open Design ontwerpen van de wedstrijd, waaronder de winnaars. Alle ontwerpen kunnen worden nagemaakt in een Fablab en het is zelfs mogelijk alle ontwerpen aan te passen, aangezien deze zijn gepubliceerd onder de Creative Commons licentie Naamsvermelding-GelijkDelen-NietCommercieel. Hoewel de wedstrijd van 2009 is afgelopen, kunnen nog steeds ontwerpen aan de (Un)limited Design website worden toegevoegd!

Open Design expo bij Protospace in Utrecht

Open Design expo bij Protospace in Utrecht

ProtoSpace, het Fablab in Utrecht, is een laagdrempelige werkplaats waar startende ondernemers, ontwerpers, kunstenaars, uitvinders en studenten zelf hun ideeën of concepten letterlijk tastbaar kunnen maken. Het lab beschikt over moderne, digitaal aangestuurde machines, waarmee een ontwerp wordt vertaald van computerbestand naar een 2D- of 3D-model in één of meerdere kleuren.

De expo was eerder te zien in het Open Design Museum van de museumnacht (n8) in Amsterdam, waar bijna 1500 bezoekers de ontwerpen kwamen bekijken en maken. Creative Commons Nederland liet toen tientallen voorbeelden zien van open source designs, waaronder inzendingen en de winnaars van de (Un)limited Design Contest. Je kon ter plekke het geëxposeerde werk namaken met behulp van Fablab machines en meenemen naar huis.

Open Web Foundation Agreement: Einfache Lizenzierung von Spezifikationen

Markus Beckedahl, November 18, 2009 04:10 PM   License: Namensnennung-Keine kommerzielle Nutzung-Weitergabe unter gleichen Bedingungen 3.0 Deutschland

Die Open Web Foundation hat diese Woche ihr Agreement vorgestellt. Das soll in Anlehnung an Creative Commons dazu dienen, Software-Spezifikationen unter eine einfache, offene Lizenz zu stellen:

The Open Web Foundation Agreement [OWFa] itself establishes the copyright and patent rights for a specification, ensuring that downstream consumers may freely implement and reuse the licensed specification without seeking further permission.

Ähnlich wie bei Creative Commons gibt es für das OWFa ein “Deed“. Darin sind die Bedingungen der Lizenzierung in verständlichen Worten erklärt. Eine Anleitung erklärt, wie man das OWFa auf eigene Spezifikationen anwenden kann.

Die Foundation hat es sich zum Ziel gesetzt, der “Welt der Formate und Protokolle” den erfolgreichen Graswurzel-Ansatz der Open-Source-Gemeine nahezubringen. Das Agreement soll dazu dienen, Software-Entwicklung “einfach, sicher und nachhaltig” zu machen.

Zu den ersten Unternehmen, die eine Implementation des Agreements für ihre Spezifikationen (oder einen Teil davon) zugesagt haben, gehören Google, Microsoft, Yahoo! und Facebook.

Donate Today to Have Your Donation Doubled by WhippleHill!

Creative Commons, November 17, 2009 06:07 PM   License: Attribution 3.0 Unported

whipplehill-logo
Our 2009 fundraising campaign continues, and to help us reach our goal of $500,000 by the end of the year, we’re delighted to announce a second corporate matching challenge, this time sponsored by WhippleHill Communications. WhippleHill will generously match every donation dollar for dollar for the next week – up to $5,000! Donate now to help us meet the challenge!

WhippleHill Communications was founded in 1998 and is based in Bedford, New Hampshire. This innovative company provides targeted communications solutions for independent schools seeking next-generation Web services. Like CC, WhippleHill values openness and innovation on the Web, with a particular focus on education, a realm CC is also heavily involved in through ccLearn.

Join WhippleHill in investing in the future of creativity and knowledge. Give what you can today!

Eerste selectie beeldmateriaal volledig op Open Beelden beschikbaar

CC Netherlands, November 17, 2009 01:04 PM   License: Naamsvermelding 3.0 Nederland

De eerste selectie van beeldmateriaal voor Open Beelden staat inmiddels onder online! De 469 items die nu op Open Beelden te vinden zijn, komen voornamelijk uit de Polygoon Hollands Nieuws collectie en enkele uit de RVD collectie van het Instituut voor Beeld en Geluid. Alle 469 istems zijn voorzien van een Creative Commons Naamsvermelding GelijkDelen licentie. Deze licentie staat hergebruik van de videos vrij toe (zelfs voor commerciele doeleinden) en maakt zo hergebruik van de videos door andere open content projecten zoals bijvoorbeeld wikipedia mogelijk. De huidige selectie is grotendeels gecentreerd rond een aantal thema’s, namelijk: stad, zomer, natuur, water, voeding, sport, onderwijs, religie en arbeid. De onderwerpen van de items zijn heel divers, zoals bijvoorbeeld een item over een caravan die ook als boot dienst doet, maar ook beelden van de Tour de France in Nederland of de eerste bewoners van Almere. Het beeldmateriaal beslaat de periode 1919 t/m 1980 en gaat van stom zwart-wit materiaal tot kleurrijke beelden met het karakteristieke commentaar van Philip Bloemendaal.

Om een indruk te geven van wat er allemaal te vinden is, een kleine greep uit het aanbod. Uit de vroege jaren, toen er nog geen commentaar onder het beeld zat, komen bijvoorbeeld deze beelden van overstromingen in Ridderkerk en Barendrecht in 1928:

Vanaf de jaren dertig komt er steeds vaker geluid bij het beeld. Tijdens de Tweede Wereldoorlog wordt het Polygoonjournaal voornamelijk aangewend als propagandamiddel voor de Duitsers en de NSB. Zo is er in 1941 een serie items genaamd ‘Nederland voedt zichzelf’ waarin propaganda wordt gemaakt voor het nationaalsocialistische idee dat een land in staat moet zijn in zijn eigen voedsel te voorzien:

Na de Tweede Wereldoorlog worden de beelden voorzien van het commentaar van Philip Bloemendaal. Met zijn karakteristieke stemgeluid is hij onlosmakelijk verbonden met het Polygoonjournaal:

Vanaf de jaren zeventig worden er ook journaals in kleur gemaakt. Een mooi voorbeeld van de meerwaarde die dit geeft is te zien in de kleurenpracht van de vlinderverzameling van de amateurentomoloog Hermans:

Voor 2009 zijn wij met de toevoeging van de hierboven beschreven selectie even klaar met het toevoegen van materiaal aan Open Beelden. Maar volgend maand wordt het mogelijk om ook als gebruiker materiaal aan Open Beelden toe te voegen. Dit kan materiaal zijn dat gemaakt is op basis van Open Beelden, maar ook eigen werk.

Na de jaarwisseling zullen wij het toevoegen van beeldmateriaal uit ons archief aan Open Beelden hervatten. Daarnaast zullen wij actief samenwerking zoeken met ander collectiehouders, om zo het aanbod op Open Beelden verder te vergroten en meer divers en nog interessanter te maken.

Om de voorbeelden van beeldmateriaal in dit bericht te kunnen bekijken raden wij aan om gebruik te maken van Firefox 3.5, of een andere moderne browser die HTML5 <video> technologie ondersteunt. Internet Explorer e.d. zal de voorbeelden niet kunnen weergeven.

[deze post van Evelien Wolda is overgenomen van het open beelden blog]

Creative Commons ist im Bundestag angekommen

CC Germany, November 17, 2009 11:57 AM   License: Namensnennung 2.0 Deutschland

Creative Commons Lizenzen sind im Bundestag angekommen. Der Wissenschaftliche Dienst des deutschen Bundestages erklärt im “Aktuell Bericht” Creative Commons auf zwei Seiten. Es freut uns sehr, dass den Parlamentariern eine kurze prägnante Zusammenfassung über unsere Lizenzen zur Verfügung gestellt wird

Creative Commons dem Bundestag erklärt

Markus Beckedahl, November 17, 2009 11:55 AM   License: Namensnennung-Keine kommerzielle Nutzung-Weitergabe unter gleichen Bedingungen 3.0 Deutschland

Der Wissenschaftliche Dienst des deutschen Bundestages erklärt im “Aktuellen Begriff” “Creative Commons Lizenzen” auf zwei Seiten.

Six Degrees of Kevin… Spacey?

James Boyle, November 17, 2009 11:39 AM   License: Attribution 3.0 Unported

I am off to Madrid for FICOD09 — a Spanish conference on the digital environment.  It looks ambitious, and I couldn’t help being amused by the announcement below..

III Forum on Digital Content to be held in Madrid from November 17th to 19th

Kevin Spacey

Madrid – October 22, 2009.  FICOD 2009 takes off in style. Besides featuring actor Kevin Spacey as the opening ceremony speaker, the forum has invited well-known names in the digital industry – Ek, Boyle, Lindholm and Hernández- and for its third edition, it is offering an ambitious technical program comprised of 133 sessions: 9 plenary sessions, 22 round tables and 102 workshops…..

Snip

Yeah, Kevin and I are tight.  Apparently he has a new film coming out on the founders of Facebook.

오픈 비즈니스를 논하다 - How to 오픈 비즈니스 후기

CC Korea (Korean), November 17, 2009 08:50 AM   License: 저작자표시 2.0 대한민국

지난 금요일 "How to 오픈 비즈니스 세미나" 참석해 주신 분들에게 감사의 말씀을 드립니다.


CC자원활동가들이 함께 준비했던 세미나에 참석해 주시고 부족한 부분이 많았지만 응원해 주셔서 감사합니다.

저희 CC자원활동가들에게도 오픈 비즈니스에 대해서 다시 생각하고 고민하게 유익한 시간이었습니다.


☞ 더 많은 사진은  여기 클릭


먼저 발표 자료를 올립니다.

* 영상 자료와 아직 덜 정리된 발표 자료는 다시 업데이트 하도록 하겠습니다.

 



 

 

How to 오픈 비즈니스 세미나 후기 

공짜로 음악 뿌리고, 떳떳이 수익도 나눴어요 (블로터) 

열린 디자이너 네트워크로 수익도 재디자인 (블로터) 

집단지성으로 만드는 티셔츠…두잉의 미완의 실험 (블로터)

내가 만든 작품, 마음껏 퍼가세요 (한겨례)
콘텐츠 돈 받고 팔던 시대는 지났다? (미디어와 오늘)
CCK 2009 세미나 'How to 오픈 비즈니스' 현장 스케치
오픈비즈니스는 브랜딩과 마케팅, 유통채널! 

인터넷 오픈 비즈니스 자멘도(Jamendo) 사례 

How to 오픈 비즈니스 후기

 

 

How to 오픈 비즈니스 세미나 트윗 


herobum CCL의 미래와 가능성 13일 14일 양일에 걸쳐 볼 수 있었습니다. 많이 응원해 주시고 많이 응원 합시다~! ^^

sinbi: #how2openbiz 진지하지만 무겁지 않고, 캐주얼하되 세련된 멋진 행사였습니다. 고생하신 보람이 있으셔요. 후기 쓸께요. 푹 쉬세요.

withCyber: CC Korea Seminar. @pengdo 님의 두잉 http://dooing.net 오픈 스피치 시작했습니다. 무한대의 콜래보레이션이라는 타이틀이 인상적이군요.

pinkstone_: 와우 DOUBLE DECK 비트박스 공연 완전 멋짐! >_< 하지만.. 딱딱한 관객분들의 반응은 썰렁….ㅋ 여기가 홍대였으면 사람 여렀 실신했을텐뎅. ^^ㅋ #how2openbiz #CCK

azaarwocky RT @steve3034 지역 소상인이나 생산자와 디자이너를 연계해서 10배-20배의 매출 증대. 국내 디자이너들도 한 번 시도할 만한 일이네요. competition을 겸해서. #CCK

 

더 많은 트윗은 여기를 클릭해 주세요~



 


CC and the Google Book Settlement

CC Luxembourg, November 17, 2009 07:27 AM   License: Paternité 3.0 Luxembourg

by Mike Linksvayer, November 16th, 2009

Originally posted here: http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/19210

The is probably the copyright story of the year — it’s complex, contentious, involves big players and big subjects — the future of books, perhaps good and evil — resulting in a vast amount of advocacy, punditry and academic analysis.

It’s also difficult item for Creative Commons to comment on. Both “sides” are clearly mostly correct. Wide access to digital copies of most books ever published would be a tremendous benefit to society — it’s practically an imperative that will happen in some fashion. It’s also the case that any particular arrangement to achieve such access should be judged in terms of how it serves the public interest, which includes consumer privacy, open competition, and indeed, access to books, among many other things. Furthermore, Creative Commons considers both Google and many of the parties submitting objections to the settlement (the Electronic Frontier Foundation is an obvious example) great friends and supporters of the commons.

We hope that a socially beneficial conclusion is reached. However, it’s important to remember why getting there is so contentious. Copyright has not kept up with the digital age — to the contrary, it has fought a rearguard action against the digital age, resulting in zero growth in the public domain, a vast number of inaccessible and often decaying orphan works, and a diminution of fair use. If any or all of these were addressed, Google and any other party would have much greater freedom to scan and make books available to the public — providing access to digital books would be subject to open competition, not arrived at via a complex and contentious settlement with lots of side effects.

Creative Commons was designed to not play the high cost, risk, and stakes game of litigation and lobbying to fix a broken copyright system. Instead, following the example of the free software movement, we offer a voluntary opt-in to a more reasonable copyright that works in the digital age. There are a huge number of examples that this works — voluntary, legal, scalable sharing powers communities as diverse as music remix, scientific publishing, open educational resources, and of course Wikipedia.

It’s also heartening to see that voluntary sharing can be a useful component of even contentious settlements and to see recognition of Creative Commons as the standard for sharing. We see this in Google’s proposed amended settlement, filed last Friday. The amended version (PDF) includes the following:

Alternative License Terms. In lieu of the basic features of Consumer Purchase set forth in Section 4.2(a) (Basic Features of Consumer Purchase), a Rightsholder may direct the Registry to make its Books available at no charge pursuant to one of several standard licenses or similar contractual permissions for use authorized by the Registry under which owners of works make their works available (e.g., Creative Commons Licenses), in which case such Books may be made available without the restrictions of such Section.

This has not been the first mention of Creative Commons licenses in the context of the Google Book Settlement. The settlement FAQ has long included an answer indicating a Creative Commons option would be available. Creative Commons has also been mentioned (and in a positive light) by settlement critics, for example in Pamela Samuelson’s paper on the settlement and in the Free Software Foundation’s provocative objection centering on the tension between the intentions of public copyright licensors and the potential for settlements to result in less freedom than the licensor intended.

Independent of the settlement, we happily noted a few months ago that Google had added Creative Commons licensing options to its Google Book Search partner program. This, like any voluntary sharing, or mechanism to facilitate such, is a positive development.

However you feel about the settlement, you can make a non-contentious contribution to a better future by using works in the commons and adding your own, preventing future gridlock. You can also make a financial contribution to the Creative Commons annual campaign to support the work we do to build infrastructure for sharing.

If you want to follow the Google Book Settlement play-by-play, New York Law School’s James Grimmelmann has the go-to blog. We’re proud to note that James was a Creative Commons legal intern in 2004, but can’t take any credit for his current productivity!

Bureau of Meteorology to release water data under CC

CC Australia, November 17, 2009 07:10 AM   License: Attribution-Share Alike 2.1 Australia


Photo: Zen Water by darkpatator

For Australia water (or the lack of it) is a big deal. So big in fact, that the Commonwealth Government saw the need to establish a national initiative for monitoring and publishing water data. Charging the Bureau of Meteorology with the task, their Improving Water Information Program will aggregate hundreds of other government departments' and agencies' information into the National Water Account, an integrated, national water monitoring and data collection service. And the Bureau are encouraging their partners to release their data under Creative Commons.
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The Water Act 2007... [and it's associated Regulations] requires the Bureau to collect and disseminate water information to the public in easily accessed ways. The Bureau's policy is to make this information available for everyone's benefit so that it can be widely reused. To ensure wide reuse of water information — and that the data suppliers copyright is protected — the Bureau of Meteorology recommends that data suppliers use the Creative Commons Attribution Australia 2.5 Licence (the 'Creative Commons Licence') to cover all data that they provide under the Water Regulations 2008.

The Creative Commons Licence gives the community permission in advance for using water information, without having to contact the supplier directly. The Creative Commons Licence allows anyone to use the water information in a manner convenient to them, provided that they acknowledge the original data supplier..."

It will be the biggest single licensing of government data here in Australia since the Bureau of Statistics adopted a site-wide CC Attribution licence last year. [Jess - after all, as we all know, weather is more popular than sex on the internet]

Better yet, the Australian Water Resources Information System (AWRIS) which is being developed as part of the Water Program will make the process of releasing and marking data under the recommended CC licence an automated process.

And if the CC love doesn't end there, the Water Program also endorses the Queensland Government Department of Environment and Resources Management's Government Information Licensing Framework (GILF) for Water - Recommended Practice standard which recommends CC as an information management tool in the publishing of water data. The Recommended Practice is itself under a CC Attribution licence.

Google Books agreement revised: no exclusive rights for 'orphan works'

COMMUNIA, November 17, 2009 05:16 AM   License: Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported

From The New York Times: Google and groups representing book publishers and authors filed a modified version of their controversial books settlement with a federal court on Friday. The changes would pave the way for other companies to license Google’s vast digital collection of copyrighted out-of-print books, and might resolve its conflicts with European governments.

The revisions to the settlement primarily address the handling of so-called orphan works, the millions of books whose rights holders are unknown or cannot be found. The changes call for the appointment of an independent fiduciary, or trustee, who will be solely responsible for decisions regarding orphan works. [17nov09]

read more

CC and the Google Book Settlement

Creative Commons, November 17, 2009 05:15 AM   License: Attribution 3.0 Unported

The is probably the copyright story of the year — it’s complex, contentious, involves big players and big subjects — the future of books, perhaps good and evil — resulting in a vast amount of advocacy, punditry and academic analysis.

It’s also a difficult item for Creative Commons to comment on. Both “sides” are clearly mostly correct. Wide access to digital copies of most books ever published would be a tremendous benefit to society — it’s practically an imperative that will happen in some fashion. It’s also the case that any particular arrangement to achieve such access should be judged in terms of how it serves the public interest, which includes consumer privacy, open competition, and indeed, access to books, among many other things. Furthermore, Creative Commons considers both Google and many of the parties submitting objections to the settlement (the Electronic Frontier Foundation is an obvious example) great friends and supporters of the commons.

We hope that a socially beneficial conclusion is reached. However, it’s important to remember why getting there is so contentious. Copyright has not kept up with the digital age — to the contrary, it has fought a rearguard action against the digital age, resulting in zero growth in the public domain, a vast number of inaccessible and often decaying orphan works, and a diminution of fair use. If any or all of these were addressed, Google and any other party would have much greater freedom to scan and make books available to the public — providing access to digital books would be subject to open competition, not arrived at via a complex and contentious settlement with lots of side effects.

Creative Commons was designed to not play the high cost, risk, and stakes game of litigation and lobbying to fix a broken copyright system. Instead, following the example of the free software movement, we offer a voluntary opt-in to a more reasonable copyright that works in the digital age. There are a huge number of examples that this works — voluntary, legal, scalable sharing powers communities as diverse as music remix, scientific publishing, open educational resources, and of course Wikipedia.

It’s also heartening to see that voluntary sharing can be a useful component of even contentious settlements and to see recognition of Creative Commons as the standard for sharing. We see this in Google’s proposed amended settlement, filed last Friday. The amended version (PDF) includes the following:

Alternative License Terms. In lieu of the basic features of Consumer Purchase set forth in Section 4.2(a) (Basic Features of Consumer Purchase), a Rightsholder may direct the Registry to make its Books available at no charge pursuant to one of several standard licenses or similar contractual permissions for use authorized by the Registry under which owners of works make their works available (e.g., Creative Commons Licenses), in which case such Books may be made available without the restrictions of such Section.

This has not been the first mention of Creative Commons licenses in the context of the Google Book Settlement. The settlement FAQ has long included an answer indicating a Creative Commons option would be available. Creative Commons has also been mentioned (and in a positive light) by settlement critics, for example in Pamela Samuelson’s paper on the settlement and in the Free Software Foundation’s provocative objection centering on the tension between the intentions of public copyright licensors and the potential for settlements to result in less freedom than the licensor intended.

Independent of the settlement, we happily noted a few months ago that Google had added Creative Commons licensing options to its Google Book Search partner program. This, like any voluntary sharing, or mechanism to facilitate such, is a positive development.

However you feel about the settlement, you can make a non-contentious contribution to a better future by using works in the commons and adding your own, preventing future gridlock. You can also make a financial contribution to the Creative Commons annual campaign to support the work we do to build infrastructure for sharing.

If you want to follow the Google Book Settlement play-by-play, New York Law School’s James Grimmelmann has the go-to blog. We’re proud to note that James was a Creative Commons legal intern in 2004, but can’t take any credit for his current productivity!

CC Japan Release iPhone App for Into Infinity

Creative Commons, November 16, 2009 08:03 PM   License: Attribution 3.0 Unported

On Friday, Creative Commons Japan and iPhone developer Appliya Studio released AudioVisual Mixer for Into Infinity, a free iPhone application specifically developed for the launch of the Into Infinity project in Japan (iTunes link). Into Infinity, which we have discussed numerous times, is a music and art project produced in collaboration between CC and non-profit web radio collective dublab.

release_black_smrelease_detail_smrelease_list_sm
When opened, the application connects to a server where the project’s resources are stored, automatically downloading sound loops (”EAR”) that are paired with visual circles (”EYE”). An Into Infinity logo serves as an anchor point to trigger sounds – users can drag and move circles with their finger and when brought into the logo’s orbit the sounds start mixing, creating new derivative works on the fly. Users can then share these mixes instantly by posting to Twitter or sharing via e-mail from within the application.

All mixes generated by the application’s users are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial license, keeping in line with the project as a whole. The release also coincides with the addition of 50 “ear” sound loops and 50 “eye” visual circles from Japanese sound and visual artists. If you have an iPhone, download it today!

release_share_smrelease_white_sm

Commoner Letter #4: Molly Kleinman of the University of Michigan

Creative Commons, November 16, 2009 06:48 PM   License: Attribution 3.0 Unported

Molly Kleinman is a long-time friend of CC and has been doing incredible work for all things copyright over at the University of Michigan as Special Assistant to the Dean of Libraries. From Espresso Book Machines to a CC-friendly Scholarly Publishing Office, we continue to be inspired by the University of Michigan’s innovative approach to open content, copyright, and especially open education, an area of focus CC is highly committed to developing through ccLearn. We’re honored to have Molly, a self-proclaimed dedicated advocate of Creative Commons, write the fourth letter in the Commoner Letter series of this year’s fundraising campaign.

Subscribe to receive future Commoner Letters by email.


Molly Kleinman2
Photo by Chan Wong CC BY-NC

Hello, Fellow Commoner,

Creative Commons licenses make it easier for me to do my work, and to help my faculty and students do theirs. Today I’d like to return the favor and encourage you to support the Creative Commons 2009 Annual Campaign, and help make sure they continue the wonderful work they’ve been doing.

Why is Creative Commons so helpful and important? Because it provides a balanced, sane alternative to the madly out-of-whack copyright system I deal with every day. I am an academic librarian and copyright specialist who teaches faculty, students, librarians, archivists and others about their rights as creators and their rights as users. Anyone familiar with the state of copyright law knows it’s messy and confusing stuff, and the very notion of users’ rights is contentious in some circles. Big Content has been waging a propaganda campaign to convince the public that all unauthorized, un-paid-for uses are infringing, illegal uses. It’s not true, but the widespread misinformation is bad for educators, bad for students, and bad for all of us who benefit from the fruits of scholarly research. Professors are afraid to share educational material with their students. Parents are afraid to let their kids post homemade videos online. All this fear hinders the ability of scholars, teachers, and students to do the work of research, teaching, and learning that is their job.

As my favorite CC video says, “Enter Creative Commons.” Creative Commons carves out an arena in which people can use and build on new works without fear. It frees us from both the looming threat of lawsuits and the time consuming and expensive demands of clearing permissions. Creative Commons helps people share openly, and the more content that CC helps to open up, whether it’s music or photography or scientific data or educational resources, the more it expands what faculty and students can teach and study freely.

I’d like to call particular attention to the work of one of Creative Commons’ offshoots, ccLearn. ccLearn is striving to realize the full potential of the internet to support open learning and open educational resources, and to minimize legal, technical, and social barriers to sharing and reuse of educational materials. I cannot overemphasize the importance of this work. In the United States alone, plummeting budgets and rising costs for both K-12 and higher education are making it harder for students and teachers to access the quality educational resources they need. Until recently, most educational content was locked behind digital paywalls or hidden in print books, and the free stuff you could find online was often unreliable. Now, the pool of high quality open educational resources is growing every day, with open textbooks, open courseware, and other experimental projects popping up all the time. Many of these projects have received support from ccLearn, and nearly all of them are built on the framework of Creative Commons licenses. Every one provides expanded access that is crucial to the future of a quality educational system, both in this country and throughout the world.

This is why it is so important to support Creative Commons, in any number of ways. Though I donate (and you should, too), I believe that one of my greatest contributions has been in helping to build the Creative Commons community from the ground up, one frustrated professor or librarian at a time. Every person I teach about Creative Commons is a person who may eventually contribute to the Commons herself, attaching licenses to her works and sharing them with the world. The bigger the Commons, the better for all of us.

Molly Kleinman
Special Assistant to the Dean of Libraries
University of Michigan Library

王春燕老师应邀参加“科技创新之法律应对与法学教育革新”暨第一届两岸清华法学论坛

CC China Mainland, November 16, 2009 08:12 AM   License: 署名 2.5 中国大陆

由清华大学法学院(北京)与清华大学科技法律研究所(台湾新竹)联合举办的“科技创新之法律应对与法学教育革新”研讨会暨“两岸清华法学论坛”成立大会于2009年11月6日、7日(周五、周六)在北京清华大学法学院模拟法庭举行,知识共享中国大陆项目负责人、中国人民大学法学院知识产权法教研室王春燕副教授应邀参加了该论坛,并在论坛第一场“信息及通讯法专题”中就《知识共享许可协议:数字时代知识创新与传播的现实模式》的论文发表了演讲。这次论坛有来自两岸多所大学、研究院所、网络管理机构、网络公司等方面的代表参加。两天的论坛围绕信息暨通讯法、公共卫生法、科技创新与知识产权法制革新、环境与能源资源法、法学教育革新等主题展开了多领域的交流。

王春燕老师从网络时代信息传播和获取的关系出发,通过“谷歌图书搜索”这一热点中可能带来的私人公司对公共知识资源控制上的隐忧,全球最大的线上百科–维基百科采用CC协议以“增进知识和文化的公共资源”,及“三面向现象”中显现的传播和现行版权制度的悖论等案例分析,探讨了数字时代知识生产与传播的新特点:即协同、混合、分享。作为知识共享中国大陆项目(Creative Commons China Mainland)负责人,王春燕老师在这次论坛上更多的从Creative Commons这场全球性的知识分享运动的背景和理念来谈,CC所倡导的开放版权和共享理念旨在改变信息传播和获取的对立,实现创作与传播的良性互动。最后,王春燕老师提出网络时代对知识信息的控制正在由二元对立向三位一体转化,即从倡导知识商品化的商业经济(Commercial Economy)和将作品视为人类共同财富的分享经济(Sharing Economy)的二元对立,向混合经济(hybrid economy)转化,基于商业目的可以从分享经济中获利,而通过商业行为可以支持分享目标。从而纠正了人们对CC与商业模式的关系上的一些误区,与会的学者和听众对王春燕老师的演讲予以了热烈的回应,与会者随后对网络版权问题进行了深入的讨论。知识共享中国大陆项目的和晓琳也参加了本次论坛。

(文/和晓琳)

Desafíos de la cooperación internacional en el espacio audiovisual iberoamericano

CC Argentina, November 15, 2009 08:33 PM   License: Atribución-Compartir Obras Derivadas Igual 2.5 Argentina

Mañana lunes el Dr. Ariel Vercelli estará participando de un seminario sobre cooperación audiovisual entre Europa y América Latina. El encuentro se desarrollará en Valencia el 16 y 17 de noviembre y busca proponer posibles alternativas para la mejora de las políticas que impulsan la cooperación audiovisual (descargar Programa en PDF).  El evento es organizado [...]

Creative Commons i Jordanien

CC Sweden, November 15, 2009 01:11 PM   License: Erkännande 2.5 Sverige

I dag lanserades Creative Commons-licenserna i Jordanien. Jordanien blir därmed det första landet i arabvärlden som har översatt och anpassat Creative Commons-licenserna. (Jordanien verkar dock i skrivande stund inte ha kommit in i licensväljaren på creativecommons.org än.)

סיכום דו"ח בחינת מדיניות רישיונות השימוש של ארגונים ופרוייקטים בתחום החינוך הפתוח

CC Israel, November 14, 2009 07:11 PM   License: ייחוס-שיתוף זהה 2.5 ישראל

להלן סקירה של דו"ח שנכתב על ידי ccLearn  (חטיבה של ארגון Creative Commons שעוסקת בתחום החינוך הפתוח) שמטרתו לבחון את מדיניות רישיונות השימוש, כפי שבאים לידי ביטוי באתרי אינטרנט של ארגונים ופרוייקטים המגדירים עצמם כ"פתוחים" או "חופשיים":

ccLearn, What status for “open”? An examination of the licensing policies of open educational organizations and projects (2008)

הדו"ח מדגיש את חשיבות היותו של המידע החינוכי באינטרנט פתוח לכל, וזאת באמצעות שורה של פעולות אשר יאפשרו שימוש קל ופשוט במידע שבאתרים אלו מההיבט המשפטי ובפרט בהיבט רישיונות השימוש.
הנקודות המרכזיות העולות מן הדו"ח הן:
1.       יש צורך בביצוע סטנדרטיזציה של רישיונות השימוש, באתרי חינוך פתוחים,באמצעות רישיונות Creative Commons. זאת לאור השונות הרבה הקיימת בין רישיונות השימוש, אשר יוצרת קושי בשילוב בין עבודות ממקורות שונים וסרבול רב בעבודה מולם.
2.       בחלק גדול מהאתרים שנבדקו התקיים קושי באיתור רישיונות השימוש וביכולת המשתמש ההדיוט להבינם. על כן, יש להקפיד על נגישותם, פשטותם ונהירותם של רישיונות השימוש.
3.       נמצא כי, לעיתים, על אף שאתר מוגדר כ"פתוח" או "חופשי", מוגדרות באתר הגבלות אשר מונעות מאנשי חינוך וסטודנטים לעשות בו שימוש מלא. לכן, רצוי כי אתרים אלו יהיו מתירנים ככל האפשר בנוגע לשימושים האפשריים במידע שבהם. 
 
הקדמה
לאנשי חינוך יש צורך בגישה לטווח רחב של משאבים חינוכיים. בעבר, גישה כזו הייתה מוגבלת ויקרה. אך כיום, הגישה לאינטרנט פותחת מאגר נרחב של משאבים היכולים לשמש לכל מטרה חינוכית הכוללת שיתוף עם הקהל בעולם הגלובלי.
מאגר זה נגיש ככל שיהיה, אינו לגמרי חופשי מכל מגבלה, היות וכל יצירה שבאה לעולם, מוגנת בזכות יוצרים. מצבה המשפטי של יצירה המוגנת, אינו משתנה גם אם היא זמינה לצפיות, הורדות והפצות באינטרנט. החריגים להגנות זכויות היוצרים (למשל, שימוש למטרות חינוך) מפורשים בצמצום. כתוצאה מכך, כאשר יוצרים משאירים את היצירות שלהם כפופות לחוקי זכויות יוצרים, השימוש ביצירה והשיתוף בה הינו מוגבל מאוד.
מכאן ניתן להסיק שזכויות היוצרים מהוות מכשול לחינוך הפתוח- בעוד חלק מאנשי החינוך בוחרים להתעלם מהחוק, החלק השני מתחשב בחוק ואנשי חינוך הופכים להיות פחות יצירתיים בשיטות הלימוד שלהם מול הסטודנטים ואף אינם חולקים מידע ביניהם.
בעלי זכויות היוצרים יכולים לבחור להתיר שימוש ביצירה על ידי הסרת ההגבלות. אחת הדרכים לעשות כן (במחקר היא מוצגת כדרך היעילה ביותר) הינה, ביטוי של ההרשאה לשימוש ביצירה שלהם ברישיון כתוב. הרישיון יכול להיות מנוסח ומותאם אישית (Custom), או רישיון סטנדרטי המבטא בכלליות תנאי שימוש מוסכמים (Standard).
התנועה למשאבי חינוך פתוחים (OER) שמה לה למטרה לענות על הצרכים של אנשי החינוך והסטודנטים. כלומר, אספקת משאבים חינוכיים ללא הגבלות העלולות לפגוע ביעילות ואיכות החינוך. ההתמקדות היא על יצירת מאגר משאבים חינוכיים ללא תשלום (למשל ברשת האינטרנט) - דבר שיגביר את שיתוף המידע החופשי. 
לאחרונה הבינו אנשי התנועה כי זכויות יוצרים הינן דבר שעלול ליצור סיבוכים ויש לקחת אותו בחשבון בדרך להשגת המטרה. החשש של המתנגדים לשימוש בשיטת הרישיונות הוא, ששימוש זה עלול לערער את יעילות הנגישות למשאבי החינוך הפתוח מבחינת המשתמשים.
מטרת מחקר זה הינה בחינה של מדיניות הרישיונות של כמה מאות אתרים באינטרנט המגדירים עצמם כ"ספקי מידע חופשי" או "פתוח". זאת על מנת להעריך האם התנאים המשפטיים אכן פוגעים ביעילות. המחקר בוחן זאת מנקודת מבטו של המשתמש, צרכן המידע הפתוח. 
המחקר
זיהוי ספקי המידע הפתוח – על מנת להשתמש במשאבים החינוכיים, על המשתמש לדעת לאתר את ספקי המידע הפתוח. לצורך כך, המחקר בחר להתייחס רק לאתרים שהגדירו את המשאבים שלהם כ"פתוחים" או "חופשיים" (אתר חופשי- אתר המפרסם הצהרה מפורשת הפונה אל הצרכן ומגדירה את המידע בו כ"חופשי", גם אתרים עם לוגו של קריאטיב קומנס נחשבו ספקי מידע חופשי).
איתור רישיון המכיל את תנאי השימוש במידע - לאחר שנמצא האתר, על המשתמש לאתר את תנאי השימוש על מנת לדעת על המגבלות בשימוש ביצירה. תנאים אלה הופיעו במגוון ורסיות, ביניהן דף נפרד אשר מגדיר את תנאי השימוש, טקסט שמביע את כוונת בעל זכות היוצרים להיות המידע בו חופשי או סימון הלוגו של קריאטיב קומונס בדף האתר ללא פירוט תנאים נוספים או במקביל להגבלות שהוסיף באופן ידני.
 
ממצאי המחקר
·         במחקר עלה כי ההגדרה העצמית של אתרים חינוכיים כ"פתוחים" או "חופשיים" לא תואמת את אותה ההגדרה בעיניי המשתמשים.
·         נמצא כי קיימת שונות רבה ברישיונות השימוש בין אתרים שונים. כך, נוצר מצב בו ישנו קושי לשלב בין חומר משני אתרים וזאת משום שתנאי השימוש שלהם סותרים ויוצרים סירבול.
·         הסתירה השכיחה והמהותית ביותר היא ההגבלה על יצירת עבודות נגזרות.
·         בחלק גדול מהאתרים כלל לא היה ניתן או התקיים קושי ממשי לאתר את תנאי השימוש באתר.
המלצות
על פי ממצאי המחקר המפורטים לעיל, ניתנו מספר המלצות:
1.       רישיונות השימוש צריכים להיות נגישים יותר, אחידים וברורים גם למשתמש ההדיוט. על מנת שמשתמש יוכל לעשות חיפוש אחר חומר המוגן ברישיונות התואמים את צרכיו, נדרש שיהיו ניתנים לקריאה על ידי מחשב, וזאת באמצעות שילוב הרישיון עם קישור (LINK) האתר של כל מקור חינוך פתוח. למרות האמור, מומלץ כי עדיין יהיה עמוד נפרד בו מפורטים תנאי השימוש.
2.       יש לבצע סטנדרטיזציה של רשיונות השימוש. כך שכל משתמש יוכל להבין ביתר קלות את הרשאותיו אל מול מקורות חינוך פתוחים. קריאטיב קומונס מהווים כיום את הסטנדרט העולמי של רשיונות מידע פתוח שאינם תוכנה. לכן, מומלץ כי כל הארגונים המספקים מידע פתוח, יאמצו את רישיונות קריאטיב קומונס.
3.       כיוון שחלק נכבד מהחומר החינוכי בו נעשה שימוש במהלך הלימודים מורכב מבליל מקורות. לכן, נדרש כי יתאפשר לשלב, באופן חוקי, בין מקורות חינוך פתוחים שונים. כמו כן, מומלץ כי רישיונות אלו יהיו מתירנים ככל האפשר. כך ניתן יהיה להגשים את החוויה החינוכית.
סיכום
הדו"ח בחן מגוון רחב של אתרים בתחום החינוך הפתוח, אשר הגדירו עצמם כ"פתוחים" או "חופשיים", במטרה לבדוק את התאמת רישיונות השימוש בהם אל משתמש היעד – איש החינוך או הסטודנט.
המסקנה העולה מן המחקר היא כי אתרים אלו יכולים להפוך את המידע שברשותם לנגיש יותר אם כל ספק תוכן יהפוך את תנאי השימוש ורישיונות השימוש בו לקלים יותר למציאה והבנה ויפחית את שונות הרישיונות. בנוסף, ממליץ המחקר לאמץ רישיונות המתירים למשתמשים לעשות שימוש נרחב יותר בתכנים המצויים באתר.
 

***נעיר כי הסקירה דלעיל אינה מהווה תחליף לדו"ח עצמו וכי בכל סתירה בין הכתוב כאן לבין הקבוע בדו"ח - הרי שהדו"ח הוא הקובע***  

Our 2010 Google Policy Fellowship

Creative Commons, November 13, 2009 08:58 PM   License: Attribution 3.0 Unported

Google Policy Fellowship Header

We’re very excited to announce that Creative Commons will once again be part of Google’s Policy Fellowship for the summer of 2010, and we’re looking forward to filling the big shoes of our 2009 policy fellow, Aurelia Schultz.  Just like last year, the Google Policy Fellow will receive a substantial grant to work at Creative Commons’ San Francisco Office on the following issues (but this is certainly not an exhaustive list of the things we’ll have you thinking about):

  • Synthesize statistics garnered from recent studies focusing on international license adoption. Fellow will be expected to generate and investigate diverse theses relating to license choice, adoption, and use.
  • Coordinate with counsel to critically analyze the current state of public domain policy in US and abroad. Develop a framework to help Creative Commons’ deploy messaging regarding public domain policy in US and abroad.
  • Research and analysis of how the contemporary discourse of copyright, sharing, reuse, and remix has been shaped over the last six years as a result of the Creative Commons project.
  • Investigate new opportunities for Creative Commons implementation in ‘uncontacted’ communities, institutions, artists, and mediums.
  • Work with Creative Commons’ international community and jurisdiction project leads on projects, research, and outreach.

Check out more details and the application, which is due by December 28th, 2009.

Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement in Canada

COMMUNIA, November 13, 2009 06:13 PM   License: Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported

A video-lecture by Michael Geist: "Everything You Need To Know About ACTA, But Didn't Know To Ask". [13nov09]

read more

Buch zum Phänomen Netlabel-Szene

CC Germany, November 13, 2009 12:56 PM   License: Namensnennung 2.0 Deutschland

Anita Michels hat beim diesjärigen Netaudio-Festival ihr neues Buch “Netlabels: Soziale Netze On- und Offline” herausgebracht. Ab sofort ist es nicht nur bei Falk Blask im Institut für Europäische Ethnologie (oder auf Bestellung bei der Herausgeberin) gedruckt zu haben, sondern steht dank Lizenzierung unter CC-BY-NC-ND 3.0 de auch zum freien Download zur Verfügung.

Aus dem Abstract:

Das Phänomen Netaudio wird erstmals aus ethnologischer Sicht untersucht. Anhand ihres vielfältigen empirischen Materials stellt Antina Michels anschaulich dar, auf welche Art und Weise Netaudio produziert, wofür Netlabels genutzt werden und wie deren Akteure in lokalen und translokalen Szene-Netzwerken kooperieren. Die Studie verdeutlicht an zwei prägnanten Fallbeispielen - den nicht-profitorientierten Netlabeln Pentagonik und Pulsar -, wie alternative Modelle zur konventionellen Musikindustrie entstehen. Musiker, Künstler, Labelbetreiber und Veranstalter schließen sich europa- und zunehmend auch weltweit in sozialen Netzwerken zusammen. Diese Pionierarbeit zeigt auf, wie die Netaudio-Szene das Netzwerk nutzt, um ihre Ideen und Ideale erfolgreich umzusetzen. Durch die zahlreichen in diesem Buch enthaltenen Interviewpassagen, Bilder, Mental Maps  und Beschreibungen bekommt der Leser einen tiefen Einblick in den Alltag der Akteure.

VPRO documentaires met CC licentie groot succes!

CC Netherlands, November 13, 2009 07:20 AM   License: Naamsvermelding 3.0 Nederland

De documentaires die in oktober door de VPRO gratis downloadbaar zijn aangeboden onder een CC licentie zijn een groot succes. Zo is de documentaire Stayin’ alive in Jo’burg ruim 37.000 keer gedownload in 180 landen via de website mininova.org. De documentaire wordt aangeboden onder Creative Commons Licentie, die hergebruik en remixen voor niet-commerciële doeleinden vrij toestaat. VPRO projectleider Bregtje van der Haak:

”Het experiment met gratis downloads als nieuwe vorm van distributie is voor de VPRO geslaagd. We hebben met deze schokkende film over Johannesburg wereldwijd 37.000 mensen bereikt, die we zonder internet nooit bereikt hadden. Ik zou graag zien wat anderen met dit materiaal gaan doen.”

Ter gelegenheid van de opening van T_Visionarium OPEN CITY in de Zuiderkerk in Amsterdam, stelt de VPRO een nieuwe documentaire onder CC licentie beschikbaar stelt op internet: Metropolis: Nieuw in de stad. Deze documentaire, die ook in het Engels wordt aangeboden als Metropolis: Coming to the City is onderdeel van het crossmedia project Eeuw van de Stad, waarin de wereldwijde verstedelijking centraal staat. worden. De documentaire kan via www.eeuwvandestad.nl/downloads (Nederlandse versie) en mininova.org (Engelse versie) gedownload worden.

INTO INFINITYプロジェクト公式iPhoneアプリがAppStoreに登場!

CC Japan, November 12, 2009 11:06 PM   License: 表示 2.1 日本

>> ENGLISH VERSION


〜クリエイティブ・コモンズ・ジャパンとAPPLIYA制作のリミックス・アプリ公開開始〜


共同リリース:
特定非営利活動法人クリエイティブ・コモンズ・ジャパン+APPLIYA株式会社+NPO Creative Commons (US)  + DubLab
日本、米国、世界 - 2009年11月13日


> PDFダウンロード


> プレス用画像ダウンロード

Seminario ACCCESO en Costa Rica

CC Guatemala, November 12, 2009 06:29 PM   License: Reconocimiento 3.0 Guatemala


nuevoCCC_simple_color

Gracias a la cobertura constante de ACCCESO:  Seminario de Creatividad, Comunidad y Ciencia del 11 al 13 de Noviembre de 2009 en San José de Costa Rica en Accceso Identi.ca y del Blog medeamaterial, podemos saber más de lo que pasa en este interesante evento que ha reunido a los más destacados profesionales locales e internacionales.

En el Seminario aCCCeso están discutiendo el licenciamiento abierto, Creative Commons, Science Commons, ccLearn y Recursos Educativos Abiertos, software libre, impacto en el comercio y sobre intercambios creativos en arte, educación, ciencia, tecnología y comunicación.

Su programa es inmejorable, así como la variedad de expositores y nos hace ver cómo la región está avanzando hacia los “commons”.

Desde ccGuatemala enviamos una cálida felicitación a  todos los organizadores que han apoyado y colaborado con este evento!

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Dimdim Webinar Registration Widget para Reunión de CC

CC Guatemala, November 12, 2009 05:04 PM   License: Reconocimiento 3.0 Guatemala


  • AGENDA DE REUNION
  • Presentación de Misión y Visión de Creative Commons Internacional y del Capítulo de Guatemala
  • Metas Específicas para el año 2010
  • Descripción de los 7 proyectos principales para el 2010 en Investigación, Música, Negocios Abiertos, Fotografía, Producción Audiovisual, Science Commons y ccLearn.
  • Definición de Líderes de Proyecto.
  • Actividad Salón CC Guatemala
  • Beneficios para los voluntarios y registro.

Dictionary of Sydney is now up and running!

CC Australia, November 12, 2009 07:19 AM   License: Attribution-Share Alike 2.1 Australia

Those of you who follow us will know we have been touting The Dictionary of Sydney for quite some time. This project - which aims to establish a self-sustaining digital encyclopaedia of the history of Sydney, Australia - is one of the examples we use of how CC can be integrated into broader cultural projects to add to their value to the broader population, and even got its own entry in the case studies book we released earlier this year - despite the fact it didn't technically exist.

We are now pleased to announce the the Dictionary it has now been officially launched! Or at least its first website has.

The website, which is run by a group of partner organisations supported principally by an ARC grant, is a dictionary, encyclopaedia, atlas, guidebook and gazetteer all in one. It already includes 470 entries, 600,000 words, 1200+ images and multimedia items as well as over 10,000 links and annotations, and the website is still growing. The Dictionary seeks to cover all kinds of history, from social and cultural history to economic history; from the first human inhabitants to the present.

Contributions - including text, photos, and audiovisual objects - have been sourced from a wide range of people including academics, historians, and volunteer members of the general public. But most interesting from our point of view - while copyright in all material posted on the website remains with the original author, contributors have been given the option to license their work to the public under the Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike licence. The CC licence is entirely optional, but it's encouraged to as a way to increase the utility of the material, allowing it to be reused by the general public, teachers, students, community groups, tour operators and even Wikipedia.

Excitingly, they've had a brilliant response. To date, most text contributors seem to have taken them up on the offer. This means that just about every page on the site is marked with the CC BY-SA logo, allowing the text to be reused, remixed and repurposed by anyone.

Having such a wealth of information from a wide range of professionals as well as locals free of charge is of great benefit and an excellent example of the people involved giving back to the community. The many different topics and contributors will also provide an in depth perspective of the history of our national's largest city, bringing to life the characters, political players, writers, dreamers, sports people, and even criminals who have made the city what it is today.

So get out there and explore the wealth of information now available for you to share and reuse. Or better yet, click on the contribution link on the website to add your own story to this new knowledge commons.

This post was written with CCau volunteer, Kelsey Lancaster

CC亞太地區電子報的新誕生!快來搶先閱讀!

CC Taiwan, November 12, 2009 04:24 AM   License: 姓名標示-相同方式分享 2.0 台灣

CC亞太地區的電子報第一期已於近日發佈,其內容是由亞太地區各地的creative commons組織所提供,而CC Asia-Pacific Newsletter 的促成以及第一集的主編是  CC Phillippines 的 Berne Guerrero 以及 CC Taiwan 的莊庭瑞兩位。該電子報也以Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 釋出。 說到電子報的發起,如果您持續在關心著台灣創用CC計畫動向的話,也許還記得就在今年(2009)二月,由CC Phillippines於馬尼拉主辦了CC Roadmap for Asia & Pacific研討會。筆者不僅有榮幸得以參與,並且也在會後撰寫了一篇詳盡的會議報導刊登於創用CC電子報第35期。當時經過兩天的互相切磋瞭解後,參與的成員都為了未來亞太地區CC的發展提供一些正面建議,其中一項便是發佈屬於亞太地區的電子報。這個建議主要希望可以透過電子報,讓亞太地區的CC組織可以更快互相瞭解彼此最新的資訊外,同時藉由電子報持續保持聯絡交流。  關於電子報的呈現方式,站在筆者個人的立場,我想特別提到語言的問題。也許有一些讀者不能明白,既然是「亞太地區」自己的電子報,選擇以英文表達是否矛盾?事實上,這個問題當時也曾被討論是否該各國以各自的語文書寫,不過若真的實際執行,恐怕最後反而收不到本來應該達成傳遞消息的成效。這確實是個很弔詭的結果,但為了溝通上的便利,基本上也是沒有選擇而必須妥協的吧。  除了這個以外,亞太地區電子報的誕生可以說是水到渠成、眾望所歸,連當時未參與研討會的CC Japan也都在電子報中參了一腳。首期創刊號的內容除了一些年初的研討會介紹外,還有許多今年後續亞太地區各地CC組織發展的一些事件,非常值得彼此參考,相信對於關心CC發展的朋友,也是一本具有國際觀的刊物。CC亞太地區的電子報未來將以雙月刊的方式呈現,也邀請您持續閱讀。...