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Canadian Creative Commons Licenses underway







Canadian Creative Commons Licenses
underway

Canadian Creative Commons Licenses
underway
07/14/2004 03:38 PM

Andrew sez, "The Canadian Internet Policy and Public Interest Clinic is porting the Creative Commons licensing system to work under Canadian copyright law." Woohoo! Link (Thanks, Andrew!)




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Canadian Creative Commons Licenses underway

Grok Headline matches for Canadian Creative Commons Licenses underway

BBC to use Creative Commons licenses


BBC to use Creative Commons licenses 05/26/2004 06:16 PM
Digital 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!)

Creative Commons ships 2.0 licenses


Creative Commons ships 2.0 licenses 05/26/2004 04:34 AM
The new Creative Commons licenses are out -- whaoo! The new licenses clarify and refine the initial terms of the 1.0 licenses, and CC has posted good, clear commentary explaining the changes.
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 Section 5.)
Link (Thanks, A. S. Bradbury!)

Creative Commons launches licenses


Creative Commons launches licenses 03/13/2003 10:16 AM

The Creative Commons project just released a set of alternative copyright licenses . They represent different declarations of authorized usage than the traditional copyright statement allows. For example, they enable a given instance of one's intellectual property to be freely used, but only with attribution to the creator, or only without changes , or in any noncommercial way . Each license includes legal language and metadata for wide readability. The project's intent is to maximize creators' available copyright options in the digital age, while facilitating collaboration .
The CC site offers some tools for learning about the project, including examples , a "choose license option" quiz , and a short Flash film . The project draws some inspiration from the wide variety of copyright models in the software world, such as open source and GPL , while simplifying the sometimes arcane language.

It's presently unclear how widely these licenses will be used.


Wired, Creative Commons and the Sampling
Licenses


Wired, Creative Commons and the Sampling
Licenses
09/21/2004 09:09 PM
Creative Commons .. webcast

creativecommons.org/wired
track this site | 4 links


Announcing (and explaining) our new 2.0
licenses | Creative Commons


Announcing (and explaining) our new 2.0
licenses | Creative Commons
05/26/2004 07:25 AM
Creative Commons 2.0 licenses released .. the new versions

creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/4216
track this site | 5 links


Public review period for Creative
Commons 2.0 licenses


Public review period for Creative
Commons 2.0 licenses
01/28/2004 01:12 AM
Creative Commons, the organization founded by Lawrence Lessig dedicated to expansion of public culture, is revising its very successful series of Open Content licenses. The draft of the next version of the Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike, which contains all the stipulations used in the other 11 licenses, is available here. The review period extends until February 15, 2004.

Flickr adds Creative Commons licenses,
OS X uploader


Flickr adds Creative Commons licenses,
OS X uploader
06/30/2004 01:05 AM
Flickr (Ludicorp's amazing, witty, easy photo-sharing/community service) has just added two spiffy new features: an uploader for OS X that works with iPhoto and a tool for automatically adding Creative Commons licenses to the photos you upload and share. (Disclosure: I'm on Ludicorp's advisory board) Link

mozCC - reads creative commons licenses
in mozilla


mozCC - reads creative commons licenses
in mozilla
02/17/2004 05:15 PM
this is exactly the sort of browser innovation that a monoculture would not permit

GarageBand.com offers Creative Commons
licenses to artists


GarageBand.com offers Creative Commons
licenses to artists
06/08/2004 05:42 AM
Wired News
GarageB and.com Leaves Door Open

GarageBand.com -- a site that both hosts independent music and uses a peer-review process to identify hot bands -- is offering the Creative Commons Music Sharing License to artists who want to distribute their tunes for free, the company said Monday.

Nice. GarageBand is one of the biggest legal mp3 sites and it's cool that they are offering a CC license to their artists. Alternative distribution of music using CC licenses is clearly a good idea and helps people understand the whole Free Culture concept. I really do believe that the issue will become more and more about how to gain attention, not how to charge for delivery. It is changing from a delivery problem to a discovery problem as storage and bandwidth become commodities. Discovery is cheap only when you have a monopoly on people's attention. Obviously, media companies like Clear Channel are trying to keep that monopoly, but I think users are going to dump those locked up modes as new modes of discovery become available. I think that the main way to get attention will be to become part of the conversation and you can only do that if you promote active sharing of your music and content.


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 PM
Janko 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!)

"BBC Creative Archive licensing to be
based on Creative Commons -
Digital-Lifestyles.info"


"BBC Creative Archive licensing to be
based on Creative Commons -
Digital-Lifestyles.info"
05/27/2004 09:08 PM

BBC Creative Archive Based On Creative
Commons


BBC Creative Archive Based On Creative
Commons
05/26/2004 04:39 PM

Science Commons | Creative Commons


Science Commons | Creative Commons 12/31/2004 05:09 PM
Creative Commons announces the Science Commons project .. patents and scientific publishing .. scientific CC license

science.creativecommons.org
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UK take on Creative Commons


UK take on Creative Commons 09/21/2004 06:23 AM
Cory Doctorow: Becky sez, "My piece on Larry Lessig and the BBC Creative Archive was published in the New Media Guardian today. The in-depth article discusses copyright in the digital age and the Creative Commons project.

"Unfortunately, to read the article you need to register." Reg Req'd Link, use "feeshfeeshfeesh@hotmail.com/feeshfeesh" (Thanks, Becky!)

Creative Commons


Creative Commons 06/12/2004 06:10 AM
Sparked by the copyright discussion raging elsewhere in this blog, I decided to license the content of this weblog under a Creative Commons Attribution - Share Alike license. In essence, what this means:

You are free:

  • to copy, distribute, display, and perform the work
  • to make derivative works
  • to make commercial use of the work

Under the following conditions:

  • Attribution. You must give the original author credit.
  • Share Alike. If you alter, transform, or build upon this work, you may distribute the resulting work only under a license identical to this one.
  • For any reuse or distribution, you must make clear to others the license terms of this work.

For the full text of the license, click here for the English version, or in Finnish - the Finnish version being the legally valid one, since this blog is physically located in Finland and written by a Finnish citizen.

Note that this license does not affect whatever rights you have under the law - it's still completely okay to quote this blog without relicensing under CC, for example.


Creative Commons 2.0


Creative Commons 2.0 05/26/2004 04:43 PM

After considering a lot of the feedback and statistics from the original Creative Commons licenses, we (I personally was only a small part of this) have launched the 2.0 licenses which I think make them easier to use and easier to understand. Congratulations and thanks to the team for all the work and an excellent step forward.

The details are on the Creative Commons page.


Creative Commons at the W3C


Creative Commons at the W3C 03/06/2004 01:53 AM
Ben Adida, one of our tech advisors, will attend the Semantic Web portion of the World Wide Web Consortium Plenary Session this Thursday and Friday in Cannes, France. RDF, the technology we chose 18 months ago to build our machine-readable licenses, recently became a finalized W3C recommendation.

"Creative Commons License"


"Creative Commons License" 12/19/2003 11:55 AM

Creative Commons UK: will it flower?


Creative Commons UK: will it flower? 04/06/2005 07:37 AM
Cory Doctorow: Edward sez, "Becky Hogge has written an excellent article about the launch of Creative Commons in the UK. She discusses the problems faced by CC in the UK, the institutions supporting it like the BBC, and how Creative Commons will become a household name in the UK."
The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), the most influential public service content provider in the world, has been behind the project from the start and is using the Creative Commons ideology as a lynchpin for its core digital project, the Creative Archive. Beyond this, institutions such as OfCom, Research Councils U.K., JISC, the Museums Libraries and Archives Council, The National Health Service, and the British Library are all making mention of CC in policy documents mapping the future dissemination of knowledge and culture. It may just represent good timing, but Lawrence Lessig's thinking has emerged as a framework for a country looking to maintain its lead role as a global content provider in the digital age.

By contrast, the commercial creative industries have raised the kind of misinformed objections to Creative Commons that will be tiresomely familiar to those engaged in the IP debate in the States. Although, during his research, Tsiavos received a warm welcome from many of the U.K.'s copyright revenue collecting societies, themselves keen to modernise practice for the digital age, the music business press in particular have been incredibly skeptical about the value of Creative Commons. Key concerns voiced have been that Creative Commons somehow undermines traditional copyright protection, that through taking part in what is in the U.K. a novel "registration process," creators may unwittingly give away their rights irrevocably, and also, in a wonderfully pitched recursive argument, that signing a CC licence could result in musicians being discounted by a music business hostile to CC. For the time being at least, the idea that, as Tsiavos puts it, "commons are not against markets; they only create new ones" appears to be falling on deaf ears.

Link

Creative Commons and The Plains


Creative Commons and The Plains 08/06/2004 05:00 PM

There's a been good discussion about music and Creative Commons licenses happening on the pho list the last day or so. The most novel post comes from Jim Griffin:

Here's an example from my new reality: In our neighborhood (The Plains, VA, population 266) and in our region there are many people who adopt for their land a conservation easement, essentially signing away (sometimes with certain modifications) their right and any future owner's right to develop the land outside some fairly restrictive parameters.

On a strictly financial basis, it makes little sense. The dramatic reduction in the land's value does bring lower property taxes, but this pales by comparison to the lost right to develop the land. And make no mistake about it: The Washington area sprawls, especially so with the restriction on the height of buildings in the city. Northern Virginia is a hotbed of real estate development, and plots of land of 30 or more acres go for a massive premium to builders ready to sell about 40 houses per acre. It is the OBS, the One Big Score, rivaling a hit album, or a string of them, in the financial payday it delivers.

Put simply, you'd be an irresponsible fiduciary to adopt a conservation easement on your land.

On the other hand, it is not uncommon for an owner to choose to do so.

Why?

They have a long-term perspective on their role in the community. They know they at most use the land during their lifetime, and they want to preserve its place in the "commons" that surround us.

The move to The Plains has been a journey from ME to WE, from the ego-sphere of Hollywood to the community grain silo, the volunteer fire department and a wave of the hand to and from the neighbors who share this valley. I can't remember my neighbors in Los Angeles; already I cannot forget those who share this place between the mountains.

So I guess I get the Creative Commons. Or I hope to. Or there is hope that I might, and that some of it may rub off on our son. And as I write this, as the fading twilight of The Plains reflects off the pond, Creative Commons makes sense. These songs, like this land, are ours for a time, and there comes a time we should pass them on to the community.

The Creative Commons story has many altruistic and pragmatic readings. Jim's story above adds one of the former. In the same thread Lucas Gonze adds an insightful rendition of the latter:

My own perspective on CC is that it doesn't matter whether licenses declare that files are redistributable or anything else in particular. What matters is that there is legal metadata.

A big part of the current impasse is caused by the need to automate clearances. We need to be able to write programs which look up rights, or at the least have a computer assisted method for looking them up by hand.

About the plains, conservationism and altruism, I personally don't see open media (or code) that way. Making your media more open gives you certain practical benefits, and if it isn't the selfish thing to do then you shouldn't do it.

Either, or, neither? Make up your own story. Keep those ideas around for the next contest. (None planned at the moment!)

Text by Jim Griffin and Lucas Gonze above copied from pho-list postings with permission.


Creative Commons Milestone


Creative Commons Milestone 12/15/2003 10:33 PM
It's a 7 meg flash file .. great new stuff .. 7MB Flash Link .. flash

lessig.org/blog/archives/cc.milestones.121503.swf
track this site | 6 links


Support Creative Commons


Support Creative Commons 12/19/2004 02:55 PM

Friends of Creative Commons,

As 2004 draws to a close, Creative Commons is strong. In the past two years since Creative Commons licenses have been available, we've taken our first large first steps with you--building some of the essential tools, adding critical pieces of infrastructure and assembling a vibrant community.

In 2004, Glenn, Larry, and the legal team made huge improvements and released version 2.0 of the main Creative Commons licenses. These new versions added many needed features while at the same time they reduced the complexity of the licenses for our users. Christine, Roland and all of the iCommons volunteers worldwide took that work, and have ported Creative Commons licenses to 12 countries. We expect to add another dozen countries early next year, and we're in conversation with more than 70.

We've found more than 5,000,000 pages with content and links back to our licenses. But the commons is about more than simply putting the work out there. So, Mike, Neeru, Matt, and Nutch.org have collaborated to develop and debut a metadata search engine that makes it easy to find content marked with Creative Commons licenses. As if that were not enough, that search functionality now ships with the amazing Firefox browser from mozilla.org.

Neeru and the tech team have also worked with other software developers to make it easy to integrate Creative Commons licenses. The list is long, and includes Flickr, Moveable Type, Squarespace, Manila, Archive.org, WinkSite, plus DMusic, Soundclick, Garageband.com, and others I'm sure I've forgotten.

We're nearer to making worry-free sampling and re-creativity mainstream. What better place to start than the cover of WIRED magazine? The WIRED CD contains sixteen sampling-friendly tunes -- and includes the Beastie Boys, David Byrne, Gilberto Gil, Chuck D and more.

In 2005 we will continue to build our worldwide community of contributors to free culture. We will continue to enable more images, music, films and text, and we'll start to work on the Science Commons. We'll have much more to tell you about it at the start of the year.

ou can help make Creative Commons and "some rights reserved" household phrases. Visit http://creativecommons.org/ support/ and you'll find out how you can make your contribution via PayPal, Amazon's Honor System, or by sending a check to Creative Commons at 543 Howard Street, 5th Floor, San Francisco, CA 94105.

Thank you for your support. It's not the commons without you.

Mark Resch, CEO
Creative Commons

Creative Commons a not-for-profit 501(c)(3) organization. Contributions are tax-deductible in the U.S. to the extent allowed by law.


Wyman on DRM and Creative Commons


Wyman on DRM and Creative Commons 03/25/2005 03:47 PM
From the Atom Working Group mailing list, some remarks from Bob Wyman that are both educational and sobering on what Creative Commons licenses do and don’t do; and yet more gloom and doom about the whole DRM train-wreck.

Creative Commons in Europe


Creative Commons in Europe 02/11/2004 07:13 PM

Neeru Paharia, our assistant director, will be in Holland over the next few days to attend the Third Zwolle Conference, entitled "Optimal management of copyright: Making it happen," on February 13 and 14. Neeru will also be checking in with friends of CC in Holland.

Meanwhile, iCommons coordinator Christiane Asschenfeldt will be visiting Switzerland over the next couple of days to speak about Creative Commons at the CERN Workshop Series on Innovation in Scholarly Communication.

If you're at either event or nearby and would like to meet up with Neeru or Christiane, let us know.

Enforcing the Creative Commons


Enforcing the Creative Commons 05/26/2004 12:11 PM
The Creative Commons is a good thing. It allows people near and far to share creative work. It's easy to... (596 words)

Creative Commons For Science


Creative Commons For Science 12/29/2004 11:48 AM

Creative Commons Europe


Creative Commons Europe 03/22/2005 04:43 PM

I had the good fortune to attend the Creative Commons Europe summit in Amsterdam this week. The meeting, part of the Creative Capital conference, was organized by the Waag Society's Paul Keller, the public project lead of CC-Netherlands. It was one of those great happenings, more and more frequent these days, that snap your eyes open to Creative Commons' long-term potential, and to how far we've come already: over 40 European Creative Commons project leads and volunteers from Spain, the Ukraine, and everywhere in between, brainstorming for two days about organizational structures, promotion strategy, and tough legal issues, like a free-culture EU. I thoroughly enjoyed seeing everyone -- many for the first time -- after so many email exchanges, and having the chance to listen to their stories about all their work. Paul deserves a medal (if we had those to give out) for pulling the event together, and there aren't words to describe Creative Commons' indebtedness to Christiane Asschenfeldt and Roland Honekamp for coordinating, over only the last year and a half no less, the development of such a great network of people. It was one of those events that feels both like a milestone and yet a beginning. Indeed, watch this space as we try to develop similar meetings around the world. (Photos will soon follow, too.)


Creative Commons Audiobooks


Creative Commons Audiobooks 04/12/2004 07:33 AM

Why the BBS Documentary is Creative
Commons


Why the BBS Documentary is Creative
Commons
06/05/2005 11:29 PM
Great defense of CC

ascii.textfiles.com/archives/000123.html
track this site | 2 links


Creative Commons Deed


Creative Commons Deed 04/25/2004 04:49 PM
excellent use of the Creative Commons License .. Condiciones de copia y distribucin .. Attribution-NoDerivs-NonCommercial .. most restrictive license .. Rights Reserved .. CC 2000-2003 .. Good Rule II .. cc

creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd-nc/1.0
track this site | 3 links


SGAE y Creative Commons


SGAE y Creative Commons 04/16/2005 03:17 PM

Creative Commons in Sweden


Creative Commons in Sweden 08/19/2004 11:03 PM

It just keeps growing: the International Commons (iCommons) expands to Sweden, under the leadership of the premier law firm Lindahl and man-about-the-Net Mikael Pawlo. Public discussion of the Swedish drafts of the Creative Commons licenses has begun.


Creative Commons search


Creative Commons search 09/05/2004 01:21 PM

Connecting two projects together - teh Creative Commons has put into beta a servcie which uses the open source spider/search engine - named Nutch. I believe Gordon Mohr works on that.

Here's the post from John Batelle.....

Doug Cutting reminds me that his Nutch open source engine is powering a beta version of Creative Commons search. This is a great example of a domain specific search application, in this case, the engine crawls and indexes all CC licensed sites and lets you find stuff by how you might want to use it. As Doug points out, there's no way the Creative Commons could have built an engine like this had it not been for open source. Cool....

[http://battellemedia.com/archives/000864.php
]


Searching Creative Commons


Searching Creative Commons 03/24/2005 08:16 PM

Somebody please tell Bjork about
Creative Commons


Somebody please tell Bjork about
Creative Commons
08/27/2004 02:01 PM

Here's why. Another reason: she's cool. It's ok to give her our phone number. Thanks.

(Via Xeni @ BoingBoing.)

honoring Creative Commons


honoring Creative Commons 05/11/2004 09:11 AM
Creative Commons has won a Prix Ars Electronica Award.
ars.jpg

Creative Commons at Australia Launch


Creative Commons at Australia Launch 02/01/2005 08:39 PM
I'll be at the Creative Commons Australia launch next week at the Queensland University of Technology, as well as making brief visits to Melbourne and Sydney. I'd love to visit with any organizations or groups interested in Creative Commons while I'm there. Drop me a line if you're around and would like to discuss Creative Commons in Australia.

Educar adopts Creative Commons


Educar adopts Creative Commons 06/17/2005 05:02 PM
Educar, one of the largest Spanish-language online communities, has recently adopted a Creative Commons license. Educar hosts education-related content and communities around it.

Creative Commons launches in Belgium


Creative Commons launches in Belgium 12/22/2004 01:09 AM

The launch ceremony of the Belgian CC Licences took place in the Bibliotheque Royale in Brussels on 10 December as part of the electronic music and free software festival Jonctions 8.

Creative Commons country head Severine Dusollier – a young researcher of copyright law at the University of Namur – had invited an interesting panel comprising artists, publishers, academics, lawyers and representatives from the collecting societies. With more than 150 participants in the audience, the panel discussion took place in a splendid setting and was lead by Suzanne Capiau, a prominent avocate in Brussels. It focussed (1) on the legal viability of the licences under Belgian law, (2) on a comparative analysis of the licences within an EU perspective as well as (3) on the necessary adjustments collecting societies will have to make to accommodate the growing desire of artists to distribute their works on a ‘Some Rights Reserved’ basis. The latter issue in particular is becoming increasingly urgent and was much debated at various conferences I attended throughout Europe in the second half of 2004.

The launch event ended on a somewhat lighter note, as local DJ Lo-bat was showing off some of his new works licenced under CC in an exclusive concert for us. Here’s Lo-bat’s personal introduction to what he’s doing: “Lo-bat is all about squeezing dirt cheap computers so hard they start moaning and rattling like nothing you heard before […] No style is safe: from brutal experiments to soft pop, he can do it all. He picked up the guitar again […] so watch out, maybe you’re lucky enough to be the first one seeing him torturing it live.” So we all relaxed to Lo-bat’s music!

Many thanks are due to Severine for her outstanding efforts during the last months. Belgium was the seventh EU country to launch.
Grok Description matches for Canadian Creative Commons Licenses underway
GrokA matches for Canadian Creative Commons Licenses underway

Canadian Creative Commons Licenses underway

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