Jane Park has a new post discussing the Creative Commons Global Meeting 2011. From the post:
The event will bring together affiliates from more than 70 jurisdictions, CC staff, as well as a number of CC Board members.
Jane Park has a new post discussing the Creative Commons Global Meeting 2011. From the post:
The event will bring together affiliates from more than 70 jurisdictions, CC staff, as well as a number of CC Board members.
Posted in Open Education
Tagged commons, copy right, copyright, creative commons, openness
Mike Masnick has a new post arguing that people can still make money without relying on business. From the post:
There are lots of business models that seem to work quite well for people who can and do connect with their fans — and one of the best ways to connect is to get the actual writing out there and get people hungry for more and more and more.
Bradley E. Abruzzi has published an article discussing the relationship between copyright and the “vagueness doctrine.” From the abstract:
The Constitution’s void-for-vagueness doctrine is itself vaguely stated. The law does little to describe at what point vague laws – other than those that are entirely standardless – might be unconstitutionally vague. Rather than explore this territory, the Supreme Court has identified three “collateral factors” that affect its inclination to invalidate a law for vagueness…
Thanks to Christine A. Corcos for the link.
Jennifer Martinez has a new post reporting that Google is requiring copyright violators to watch a video on copyright before they are allowed to upload to YouTube again.
Jonathan Bailey has a new post on Wylio, a tool to for formatting and giving attribution for CC-licensed photos on Flickr. From the post:
While there are thousands upon thousands of images available for easy reuse under Creative Commons Licenses in Flickr, properly attributing those images is time-consuming and can be very confusing.
Posted in Open Education
Tagged cc, CC licenses, commons, copyright, creative commons, openness
Nick Freear has a new post on why Creative Commons licenses shouldn’t be used for software. From the post:
The short answer is, if you use a Creative Commons License your software probably won’t be free software/ open source software, and therefore won’t be re-usable by others including developers (which is what you want right?)
Posted in Open Education
Tagged cc, CC licenses, copy right, copyright, creative commons, open content, open source, openness
Josh Hadro has a new post discussing the Google Book Settlement rejection from the perspectives of librarians. From the post:
What librarians can look forward to instead: a renewed commitment from library advocates to make more content accessible to scholars and to the general public, whether via an alternative settlement agreement or legislative recourse.
Posted in Open Education
Tagged copy right, copyright, Google's Settlement, Internet, library, openness, policy, public domain
A course on Open Content Licensing for Educators has begun at WikiEducator.
Posted in Open Education
Tagged commons, copy right, copyright, creative commons, e-learning, higher education, oer, online learning, open content, Open Education, openness
Glyn Moody has a new post on “the end of copyright’s social contract”. From the post:
Looks like the social contract can now be torn up: even without that copyright monopoly – and remember, monopolies are bad things – artists are still creating.
The UNESCO Chair in e-learning has posted a comic explaining Creative Commons. Thanks to Jordi Cornet for the link.