New books under CC licenses
Grok Headline matches for New books under CC licenses
German Creative Commons licenses launch
with a bang and two books
German Creative Commons licenses launch
with a bang and two books
06/11/2004 05:34 PMJanko sez, "The German Creative Commons licenses are introduced today,
and my publisher agreed to participate by putting two books out under
a BY-NC-ND license. Which is remarkable for two things: a) heise is
actually one of the most influential German IT publishers. b) one of
the books is mine :)"
Link
(
Thanks, Janko!)
The New York Times > Books > Will
Eisner, a Pioneer of Comic Books, Dies
at 87
The New York Times > Books > Will
Eisner, a Pioneer of Comic Books, Dies
at 87
01/05/2005 04:28 PMthis one by Sarah
Boxer
nytimes.com/2005/01/05/books/05eisner.html
track this
site | 4 links
The New York Times > Books >
Books of The Times: The Pastiche of a
Presidency,Imitating a Life, in 957
Pages
The New York Times > Books >
Books of The Times: The Pastiche of a
Presidency,Imitating a Life, in 957
Pages
06/20/2004 03:35 AMNYT BRUTAL BOOK REVIEW FOR BUBBA .. As you can see here ..
review
nytimes.com/2004/06/20/books/20CLIN.html?ei=5006&en=b1de08dbc
243a997&ex=1088308800&partner=ALTAVISTA1&pagewanted=print&position=
track
this site | 4 links
Hey, Your Library's Books Are in My
Google. No, Your Google Is in My Library
Books.
Hey, Your Library's Books Are in My
Google. No, Your Google Is in My Library
Books.
12/19/2004 03:36 PMSo the big<
/a> news
a> is about Google
and libraries. I don't feel the need to comment on this
right now, as you can find plenty of other places for that. However,
here are a few angles I haven't seen discussed elsewhere in the
library blogosphere.
- Librari
es and the Internet
"More broadly, the Internet can profoundly improve the relationship
between libraries and society. For example, there are two major
libraries in my town -- a college library, and a public library. My
library card works in both places. I used to favor the college
library, because there was open WiFi access there -- which meant,
among other things, that I could use LibraryLookup from my laptop to
find books in the stacks. Recently, though, the college shut down its
open access point. And from an IT administrator's point of view, I can
understand why. Not long after, the public library installed an open
access point. So now it's my favorite spot, and lately I notice other
mobile professionals congregating there too." [Jon Udell's
Weblog
(Click over to read Jon's story about getting locked in
the library, too!)
- "A quick calculation using the figures above suggests an average
scan rate of 3200 volumes per day (assuming 365 days/year for 6 years)
at the University of Michigan site alone." [Tito Sierra on the WEB4
LIB mailing list]
- "An even quicker calculation shows that they will need to
digitize 2.25 books _a_minute_, 24 hours/day, 365 days/year to
digitize 7 million volumes in six years." [Roy Tennant on the WEB4
LIB mailing list]
It's times like this when I wish
Karen Coyle had<
/a> a blog.
The new licenses are here, the new
licenses are here!
The new licenses are here, the new
licenses are here!
05/25/2004 05:55 PM
I just updated the licenses on this blog to the new
versions. Personally, I did it for the change in warranty
provision. Check it out if you have any currently CC'd content, and
update accordingly (it's just changing the URL path from 1.0 to 2.0 in
your HTML) if you feel the changes are for the better as well.
looking into the new CC licenses
looking into the new CC licenses
05/26/2004 06:04 PMseems like they're better in every regard. congrats to the commons
crew.
RIM licenses to Motorola
RIM licenses to Motorola
04/21/2004 07:26 AMGlobe and Mail Apr 21 2004 11:41AM GMT
Licenses Revoked
Licenses Revoked
08/12/2004 12:59 PM
California Supreme
Court voids all San Francisco same-sex marriages . Said the mayor
overstepped his authority and that the city violated the state law.
City art and CC licenses
City art and CC licenses
01/27/2004 05:01 AM
Over at the blog "A Month Full Of Wednesdays" I noticed a post describing a recent Minneapolis call for
music and video to play in stations and a recent call
for artwork for Cleveland's public transit. The post mentions an
idea to extend Cleveland art requests to include audio for use in
stations and the transit authority's hold system.
The author mentions that Creative Commons licenses would be a good
idea to level the playing field and allow the municipal companies to
share the music with others on their site freely. We can't help but
agree; these projects calling for artwork, music, and video for public
transportation ask creators to contribute their work for the good of
the community, much like our licenses do for the good of a greater
culture.
NEC Licenses USB On-The-Go for 3G Phones
NEC Licenses USB On-The-Go for 3G Phones
01/22/2004 02:13 AM3G Jan 21 2004 8:34AM GMT
RIM licenses technology to Motorola
RIM licenses technology to Motorola
04/21/2004 08:59 AMZDNet Apr 21 2004 12:57PM GMT
Motorola Licenses RIM Technology
Motorola Licenses RIM Technology
04/21/2004 12:51 PMUnder a new licensing pact, Motorola devices can connect to RIM's
BlackBerry Enterprise Server.
3G wireless licenses likely in 2006
3G wireless licenses likely in 2006
12/30/2004 11:42 PMCNET News.com Dec 31 2004 4:13AM GMT
PatenTuX, recognition of car licenses
PatenTuX, recognition of car licenses
10/30/2003 04:56 PMFile release
Japanese iCommons licenses available
now!
Japanese iCommons licenses available
now!
03/06/2004 01:53 AMI am very happy to announce that our Japanese-law and -language
licenses are now available for use from our site. Just select
"Jurisdiction: Japan" when choosing a license, and
the site will point you to the right document. For those with browsers
set to English, the Commons
Deed will appear in
English. For those with broswers set to Japanese, in
Japanese. And the u
nderlying legal code is in Japanese.
This is a major milestone for Creative Commons, and I'd like to
extend a special thank you to GLOCOM for driving iCommons
Japan, to Yuko Noguchi and Emi Wakatsuki for their extraordinary
efforts, and to Machina for her keen
insights at various points in the drafting process.
Kernel Modules that Lie About Their
Licenses
Kernel Modules that Lie About Their
Licenses
04/27/2004 11:54 AMRomania to auction four 3G licenses
Romania to auction four 3G licenses
07/14/2004 03:22 PMInvestRomania Jul 14 2004 5:42PM GMT
3G licenses to be issued next year
3G licenses to be issued next year
09/17/2004 09:52 AMBusiness World Sep 17 2004 1:53PM GMT
German licenses launched
German licenses launched
06/11/2004 05:55 PMWe've recently flipped the switch on German Creative Commons
licenses. Like the recent Brazil, Finland, and Japan licenses, in
addition to the rewritten legal code that is now based on German law,
the license interface is now available in
German, as well as the licenses
themselves.
Thanks goes out to the folks at both The Insitute for Information Law at the
University of Karlsruhe and Institut für Rechtsfragen der Freien und
Open Source Software
(ifrOSS) for all their help along the way. This press
release has more details about the launch.
AOL Licenses Viewpoint Ad Technology
AOL Licenses Viewpoint Ad Technology
10/30/2003 01:40 PMAtheros licenses technology from ARM
Atheros licenses technology from ARM
07/06/2004 05:03 PMThe move is meant to shorten the time it takes to get products to
market.
Chinese 3G licenses to be delayed
Chinese 3G licenses to be delayed
09/16/2004 05:23 PMTelecoms.com Sep 16 2004 8:26PM GMT
Sony licenses VIA tech for PSP
Sony licenses VIA tech for PSP
08/31/2004 06:02 AMSigns up S3TC
BBC to use Creative Commons licenses
BBC to use Creative Commons licenses
05/26/2004 06:16 PMDigital Lifestyles is reporting that Larry Lessig has been named to a
BBC advisory board and that the BBC's Creative Archive project (which
aims to put the BBC's archives online for non-commercial re-use) will
use Creative Commons licenses:
Professor Lawrence Lessig, chair of the Creative Commons project was
clearly excited: "The announcement by the BBC of its intent to develop
a Creative Archive has been the single most important event in getting
people to understand the potential for digital creativity, and to see
how such potential actually supports artists and artistic creativity."
He went to enthuse "If the vision proves a reality, Britain will
become a centre for digital creativity, and will drive the many
markets – in broadband deployment and technology – that
digital creativity will support."
Link
(
Thanks, Simon!)
Announcing (and explaining) our new 2.0
licenses
Announcing (and explaining) our new 2.0
licenses
05/25/2004 06:04 PMLast night, after many months of gathering and
processing great feedback from all of you, we
turned on version 2.0 of the main Creative Commons licenses. The 2.0
licenses are very similar to the 1.0 licenses -- in aim, in structure,
and, by and large, in the text itself. We've included, however, a few
key improvements, thanks to your input. A quick list of new features
follows. All section numbers refer to the Attr
ibution-Noncommercial-ShareAlike 2.0 license. (Corresponding
section numbers may vary across licenses.)
Attribution comes standard
Our web stats indicate that 97-98% of you choose Attribution, so we
decided to drop Attribution as a choice from our license menu -- it's
now standard. This reduces the number of licenses from eleven possible
to six and makes the license selection user interface that much
simpler. Important to remember: Attribution can always be disavowed
upon licensor request, and pseudonymous and anonymous authorship are
always options for a licensor, as before. If we see a huge uprising
against the attribution-as-stock-feature, we'll certainly consider
bringing it back as an option.
Link-back attribution clarified
Version 1.0 licenses did not carry any requirements to add
hyperlinks as attribution. Under the 2.0 licenses, a licensor may
require that licensees, to fulfill their attribution requirement,
provide a link back to the licensor's work. Three conditions must be
satisfied, though, before a licensee faces the linkback requirement:
(1) linking back must be "reasonably practicable" -- you can't string
me up for failing to link to a dead page, for example; (2) the
licensor must specify a URL -- if you don't provide one specifically,
i have no linkback obligation; (3) the link licensor provides must
point to the copyright and licensing notice of the CC'd work -- in
other words, licensors who abuse the linkback as an engine for traffic
to unrelated sites don't enjoy linkback rights.
Synch rights clarified
The new licenses clarify when licensees may or may not synchronize
musical CC'd works in timed-relation with a moving image. Basically,
if a license allows derivatives, it allows the synching of music to
video. If no derivs, no synching allowed. (See Sect
ion 1b.)
Other music-specific rights
clarified
The default rules for music-related copyrights can be particularly
complicated, and the 2.0 licenses go to greater length to clarify how
various CC license options affect music rights. In a nutshell: If you
pick the "noncommercial" provision, you retain the right to collect
royalties from BMI, ASCAP, or the equivalent for performance
royalties; from Harry Fox or the equivalent for mechanicals; and from
SoundExchange or the equivalent from webcasting compulsories. If you
allow commercial re-use, you waive the exclusive rights to collect
these various revenue streams. This is not a departure from the policy
embodied in the 1.0 licenses -- these same results would be
extrapolated by any reasonable interpretation. But 2.0 just makes it
all clearer, and using the language of the profession. (See Sect
ions 4e and 4f.) Note: This music-specific language marks the
first time we've referred to any specific statutes in the generic CC
licenses. This means that future iCommons licenses will have to do the
same somewhat complicated mapping exercise for each respective
jurisdiction.
Warranties? Up to licensors
Unlike the 1.0 licenses, the 2.0 licenses include language that
makes clear that licensors' disclaim warranties of title,
merchantibility, fitness, etc. As readers of this blog know by now,
the decision to drop warranties as a standard feature of the licenses
was a source of much organizational soul-searching and analytical
thinking for us. Ultimately we were swayed by a two key factors: (1)
Our peers, most notably, Karl
Lenz, Dan Bricklin, and MIT. (2) The realization that licensors
could sell warranties to risk-averse, high-exposure licensees
interested in the due diligence paper trial, thereby creating nice CC
business model. (See the Prelinger
Archive for a great example of this free/fee, as-is/warranty
approach.) You can find extensive
discussion of this issue in previous posts on this blog. (See Sect
ion 5.)
Share Alike Across Borders
Version 2.0 licenses that feature the Share Alike requirement now
clarify that derivatives may be re-published under one of three types
of licenses: (1) the exact same license as the original work; (2) a
later version of the same license as the original work; (3) an
iCommons license that contains the same license elements as the
original work (e.g. BY-SA-NC, as defined in Sect
ion 1 of each license). The version 1.0 licenses required that
derivative be published under the exact same license
only. Our tweak means much better compatibility across future
jurisdiction-specific licenses and going forward across versions. Less
forking, more fun. (See Sect
ion 4b.)
Otherwise, Share Alike Means Share
Alike
After much very strong and eloquent argument from our readers and
supporters, and notwithstanding the increased flexibility of Share
Alike in the iCommons context, we decided not to make
the BY-NC-SA and plain BY-SA licenses compatible. If you take a work
under BY-NC-SA 2.0 and make something new from it, for example, you
can re-publish under BY-NC-SA Japan, or BY-NC-SA 7.4 (when that
comes), but you cannot republish it under any other license or combine
it with BY-SA content. Similarly, a derivative made from a work under
BY-SA 2.0 may be published only under BY-SA 2.0, BY-SA (iCommons
license), or BY-SA 9.1, but it can't be mixed with BY-NC-SA or other
noncommercial content and republished.
Nifty new Some Rights Reserved
button
Check out the button at the bottom of this page. Wouldn't that look
good on your site? Time for an upgrade, cosmetic as well as
legal?
how MT's new licenses work for Ari
how MT's new licenses work for Ari
05/18/2004 07:22 PMthe new license lets consultants do a lot of new services and
installations for pay
More Than 1,000 Gay Couples Seek
Licenses (AP)
More Than 1,000 Gay Couples Seek
Licenses (AP)
05/18/2004 11:43 AMAP - More than 1,000 gay couples sought applications for marriage
licenses on the first day Massachusetts became the first state to
allow same-sex couples to legally wed, a survey of the largest cities
and towns in the state by The Associated Press showed.
IBM licenses Rambus XDR interface
IBM licenses Rambus XDR interface
06/17/2005 04:25 PMThe Register Jun 17 2005 11:25AM GMT
Samsung licenses PowerVR MBX
Samsung licenses PowerVR MBX
01/29/2004 09:58 AMImagination's deal with ARM pays off
Tender for 3G licenses slated for Aug 31
Tender for 3G licenses slated for Aug 31
08/27/2004 01:35 PMBudapest Business Journal Aug 27 2004 6:02AM GMT
New round of bidding for 3G licenses
New round of bidding for 3G licenses
02/07/2005 01:59 AMMalaysiakini Feb 7 2005 6:43AM GMT
Uplinkearth Licenses CM4all Builder
Uplinkearth Licenses CM4all Builder
06/15/2004 01:37 PMtheWHIR Jun 15 2004 5:23PM GMT
Croatian ops receive UMTS licenses
Croatian ops receive UMTS licenses
12/19/2004 03:43 PMTelecoms.com Dec 18 2004 12:54AM GMT
3G mobile services licenses postponed
3G mobile services licenses postponed
09/24/2004 07:50 AMRBC Sep 24 2004 11:24AM GMT
ECC Technologies Licenses Designs to
NASA
ECC Technologies Licenses Designs to
NASA
07/05/2004 02:35 AMECC Technologies, Inc., a pioneer in developing and licensing
advanced, ultra-high-performance, parallel Reed-Solomon (PRS)
error-correcting (ECC) encoder and decoder designs, today announced
that it has licensed PRS ECC designs to NASA Goddard Space Flight
Center (NASA Goddard) in Greenbelt, Maryland. [PRWEB Jul 5, 2004]
software licenses from a developer
standpoint
software licenses from a developer
standpoint
06/18/2004 11:48 PMcomparing table one and table two on this page is very interesting
Symbian licenses Microsoft Exchange
Symbian licenses Microsoft Exchange
03/23/2005 03:22 PMPC Magazine UK Mar 23 2005 5:59PM GMT
HP Licenses Apple's iPod & iTMS
HP Licenses Apple's iPod & iTMS
01/08/2004 07:43 PMgrouchomarxist writes "According to the press release here and this
article at Forbes HP is licensing Apple's iPod technology for its own
MP3 player and use ...
Briefly: Atheros licenses technology
from ARM
Briefly: Atheros licenses technology
from ARM
07/06/2004 05:03 PMroundup Plus: Acacia strikes first cable patent deal...T-Mobile to use
Nortel billing technology...nLayers joins application management
crowd...Unisys buys security consulting firm.
Grok Description matches for New books under CC licenses
GrokA matches for New books under CC licenses
New books under CC licenses