Planet Creative Commons

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

Projekt spolupráce organizácie kolektívnej správy a Creative Commons

CC Slovakia, January 10, 2012 08:20 PM   License: Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported

Vo Francúzsku vznikol nový pilotný projekt medzi Creative Commons Francúzsko a najväčšou organizáciou kolektívnej správy SACEM. V rámci tohto pilotného projektu môžu členovia SACEMu využívať jednu z troch nekomerčných licencií Creative Commons. SACEM však bude naďalej vyberať odmeny za komerčné využívanie predmetov ochrany.

Toto je už štvrtý pilotný projekt s veľkou organizáciou kolektívnej správy podporovaný Creative Commons. V súčasnosti prebiehajú pilotné projekty s organizáciami BUMA/STEMRA (Holandsko), KODA (Dánsko) a STIM (Švédsko). Každý z uvedených pilotných projektov poskytuje príležitosť pre členov organizácie kolektívnej správy využívať výhody CC licencií v spojení s používaním predmetov ochrany za podmienok dohodnutých v zmluvách s príslušnou organizáciou.

Free Software Foundation Europe vyzýva na prijatie novely slovenského autorského zákona

CC Slovakia, January 10, 2012 08:20 PM   License: Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported

Free Software Foundation Europe, ktorá sa venuje propagácii slobodného softvéru, vyzvala na prijatie novely slovenského autorského zákona, ktorá by konečne umožnila slovenským občanom rozširovať ich diela a iné predmety ochrany pod licenciami Creative Commons či licenciami pre slobodný softvér (GNU GPL, Linux, Mozilla Firefox, WordPress a pod.).

Príprava licencie Creative Commons 4.0

CC Slovakia, January 10, 2012 08:04 PM   License: Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported

Creative Commons začalo diskusiu ohľadne pripravovanej licencie Creative Commons verzie 4.0. V priebehu najbližších troch mesiacov sa budú zbierať pripomienky a problémy, ktoré by nová verzia mala vyriešiť. Následne by mala pracovná skupina začať pracovať na návrhu tejto novej licencie.

Bohužiaľ, kvôli  zlyhaniu Národnej rady Slovenskej republiky, bude náš právny systém stále nekompatibilný s novou licenciou, zaostávajúc za zvyškom sveta.

CC adopter: Habitatnews (Singapore)

CC Singapore, January 10, 2012 02:10 PM   License: Attribution 3.0 Unported

Singapore-based ‘Habitatnews’ (habitatnews.nus.edu.sg) is a site dedicated to Natural History, highlighting talks, books, events and issues, in nature, biology and the environment.

The content is licensed under an older CC license, but valid nonetheless.
Habitatnews

The logo is located at the bottom of the site, btw.

Habitatnews

p.s. The HTML code for the CC license can be generated here.


Filed under: CC-SG Adopters

New pilot project allows collecting society SACEM members to use Creative Commons licenses

Creative Commons, January 10, 2012 11:36 AM   License: Attribution 3.0 Unported

A new pilot project between Creative Commons, Creative Commons’ legal affiliate in France, and the French collecting society SACEM allows SACEM members to license their works under one of the three non-commercial CC 3.0 licenses. Previously, authors and composers of musical works represented by SACEM (the biggest French collecting society) were prevented from using any of the CC licenses, as SACEM requires that its members transfer their rights to the collective on an exclusive basis.

This is the fourth major collecting society pilot supported by Creative Commons. CC maintains ongoing pilots with BUMA/STEMRA (Netherlands), KODA (Denmark), and STIM (Sweden). Each pilot provides the opportunity for members to take advantage of CC licenses in connection with their use under the terms of the agreements reached with each society.

The CC/SACEM pilot makes it possible for SACEM members to apply one of the three non-commercial licenses to (some of) their works. These works can then be shared (and remixed if the license allows derivative works) for non-commercial purposes under the terms established by the agreement negotiated with SACEM. At the same time SACEM will continue to collect royalties for commercial uses of these works.

Bernard Miyet, President of SACEM’s Management board, points out that this approach balances the desire to share music non-commercially with the need for renumeration for commercial uses of the works in question:

“This agreement shows the willingness of SACEM to adapt to the practices of some of its members, particularly as regards digital uses. It’s an advantage for authors, composers and publishers, who, if they wish to, can promote their works non-commercially in a defined legal framework, while retaining the possibility of receiving a fair and effective remuneration for the exploitation of their creations. I am proud to have reached this balanced agreement that meets the expectations of many creators.”

Creative Commons is pleased to see SACEM allowing its members to make use of CC licenses, giving them more flexibility to adapt to the digital environment. We hope that this pilot will be embraced not only by creators in France, but also serve as inspiration to collecting societies in other jurisdictions, many of whom still block their members from using CC licenses altogether.

More information about the pilot including a list of SACEM-related Frequently Asked Questions can be found on our wiki, the website of Creative Commons France and on the SACEM website.

如何尋找「開放授權」的圖片檔案?

CC Taiwan, January 10, 2012 09:33 AM   License: 姓名標示-相同方式分享 3.0 台灣

筆者在參與台灣創用CC計畫以及教育部創用CC計畫歷程中,最常碰到的問題就是「請問我用XXX的圖片放在教材或文章裡合法嗎?」、「請問我這樣標示圖片來源檔案是正確的嗎?」、「請問要去哪邊尋找用了不會侵犯著作權法的圖片檔案呢?」而這些問題也是目前教師教學、參加教案比賽、學生撰寫期末報告、民眾舉辦小型活動時所容易碰到的問題。本次專欄將以筆者自己的經驗,簡介如何尋找採取創用CC授權或已進入公共領域的圖片檔案,並概要說明使用這些檔案時應注意的標示問題,希望藉此可以使網路使用者更加願意使用開放授權的檔案,以及注意如何合法地使用這些檔案。

一、如何尋找創用CC授權圖片?

創用CC授權為一種開放的授權條款,當作者將其作品(圖文、音樂影像)採取創用CC授權,並選擇授權條款(例如:姓名標示—非商業性)後[1],使用者在使用其作品時,只要達到作品授權條款的條件,使用者就不用擔心著作權侵權問題。目前台灣創用CC網站的檔案搜尋介面,已整合了各種採取創用CC授權的圖像、音樂、影像、研究資料庫網站。由於本次主題以圖片為主,以採取創用CC授權的圖片網站Flickr為例:

閱讀全文

Foto dengan #lisensiCC dari Fotopedia

CC Indonesia, January 10, 2012 08:55 AM   License: Attribution 3.0 Unported

Fotopedia.com menyediakan berbagai foto dengan lisensi CC yang dapat Anda gunakan kembali. Walau demikian, foto-foto di dalam situs ini tidak dilisensikan pada satu lisensi CC yang sama. Untuk mengetahui apa yang dapat Anda lakukan pada masing-masing foto, Anda dapat memperbesar foto yang Anda ingin pergunakan dan melihat lisensi yang tertulis pada sebelah kanan foto.

Untuk melakukan pencarian, Anda dapat menuju pada tautan ini.

知识共享中国大陆项目负责人王春燕当选2011“知识中国”年度人物

CC China Mainland, January 10, 2012 08:11 AM   License: 署名 2.5 中国大陆

2012年1月6日,由全球最大的中文百科网站——互动百科主办的“知识中国”2011年度人物颁奖典礼在国家图书馆音乐厅隆重举行。来自社会各界的知识人士与百家主流媒体共千人齐聚一堂,共同见证了“知识中国2011年度人物”评选结果的揭晓。


活动现场


央视著名主持人朗永淳、胡蝶担纲此次盛典主持

本届知识中国以“改变”为主题,以表彰那些在知识传播、知识普及领域做出卓越贡献的知识人士,以及对现实社会或未来社会具有重大影响力的知识改变者。中国工程院院士倪光南这样评价知识中国评选:“在当今文化兴国的大势下,互动百科再度吹响知识中国的号角,彰显了新媒体的前瞻性和公益性。尊重知识、尊重人才,是建设社会主义文化强国的必由之路。只有全社会真正形成尊重知识、尊重人才的新风尚,中国才能通过自主创新,不断地发展,持续地为世界文明做出贡献。”经过推选、初选、公示、复选和终审环节,来自各个领域的十位“知识中国2011年度人物”脱颖而出,他们分别是:中国人民公安大学教授王大伟、无手乡村教师马复兴、著名漫画家缪印堂、原中国麻风病防治研究中心防治部主任杨理合、知识共享中国大陆项目负责人王春燕、博客中国创始人方兴东、草根行家的杰出代表冯济相、《中国国家地理》杂志社社长李栓科、著名探险家杨勇、著名收藏家路东之。


大合影

评委会为王春燕给出的获奖理由是:她所负责的“知识共享中国大陆项目”改写了现有的因知识产权问题带来的知识传播上的弊端,构筑了良好的知识共享与权利保障体系,塑造了网络知识平台的分享模式。为互联网条件下的知识共享和传播做出了大量基础性工作,以使知识在更大范围及更大程度上为大众分享和传播。


王春燕发表获奖感言

中国大百科全书出版社编审、数字出版专家王勤作为颁奖嘉宾为王春燕进行了颁奖,之后,主持人郎永淳对王春燕进行了简短的现场访谈,王春燕谈到知识通过不断地传播与分享会具备更积极的意义与价值,与原有的分享模式相比CC协议通过其法律与技术相互融合的框架表现出了极大的优势,CC模式为创作者提供了多元化的选择,有助于共同实现作者权益与知识传播。颁奖嘉宾王勤充分肯定了CC协议对于知识传播的意义。


盛典主持人郎永淳对王春燕进行现场访谈

王春燕现任教于中国人民大学法学院,自2005年1月起担任知识共享中国大陆项目负责人, 自此以来,她带领知识共享中国大陆项目团队着手2.5版CC协议的翻译与本地化,以及与本地化协议相关的各项推广工作。通过项目团队的共同努力,CC协议获得了社会各界的广泛认可和支持,并倡导了良好的合作共享的社会氛围。(更多关于知识共享中国大陆项目的信息请参见:http://cn.creativecommons.org/


另一位获奖人无手乡村教师、“感动中国”人物马复兴与王春燕交谈

作为知识领域最受瞩目的文化盛典,“知识中国”迄今已是第二届举办,并得到了中国互联网协会网络科普联盟、中国互联网违法和不良信息举报中心的大力支持,与中国文字著作协会、中国移动互联网产业联盟和全国高校网络联盟的参与协办。活动还与搜狐、腾讯、北京晨报、北京科技报等九十多家媒体,以及明星书院、“多背一公斤”等八家公益组织进行合作。对此,互动百科CEO潘海东表示:传播知识、传承文化是互动百科作为知识媒体的责任所在,举办“知识中国”正是希望最大程度发挥知识媒体的影响力,打造中国知识领域的“诺贝尔奖”,通过社会各界力量共同推进知识的跨文化传播与交流。(关于2011“知识中国”年度盛典的详情请参见http://zhishi.hudong.com/

Let’s CC: buscador de contenido con licencia Creative Commons

CC Spain, January 09, 2012 10:20 PM   License: Reconocimiento 3.0 España

Let’s CC es una herramienta para buscar contenido bajo licencia Creative Commons. Se trata de un meta-buscador que utiliza interfaces provistas por Flickr, Jamendo, ccMixter, Youtube y Slideshare para encontrar imágenes, sonidos, vídeos y documentos con sólo un click. Funciona sorprendentemente rápido y permite seleccionar el tipo de licencia CC específico que se ajusta a tus [...]

3D-Drucker als Open-Source-Hardware

Markus Beckedahl, January 09, 2012 03:50 PM   License: Namensnennung-Nicht-kommerziell-Weitergabe unter gleichen Bedingungen 2.0 Deutschland

Bisher sind 3D-Drucker eine Nischenerscheinung. Das soll sich jedoch demnächst ändern. Unter 3Ders.org wird ein Bausatz des in Hong Kong angesiedelten Start-Ups Makible vorgestellt, der das 3D-Drucken zuhause für 300 US-Dollar (etwa 235 €) ermöglichen soll. Der Drucker soll so kompakt gebaut sein, dass er auf einen Schreibtisch passt, die damit erzeugten Modelle können in etwa DIN A5 groß und ca. 10cm hoch sein.

Das besondere an 3D-Druckern: Sie sollten die Fähigkeit haben, sich zum größten Teil selbst zu reproduzieren, so dass neben einigen handelsüblichen Materialien, die man in einem gut ausgestatteten Baumarkt bekommt, nichts weiter benötigt um einen weiteren Drucker herzustellen. Die meisten der Bauteile stehen unter OpenSource-Lizenzen wie der GPL. Auch die Creative Commons-Lizenzen werden für freie 3D-Modelle immer häufiger genutzt. Eine aktive Community sorgt hier für permanente Verbesserungen der Geräte.

Die beiden bekanntesten OpenSource-3D-Print-Systeme sind das 2006 gegründete RepRap und Makerbot, von dem bereits mehrere hundert Maschinen im Einsatz sind. Auch MakerBot Industries kündigten eine neue Version ihres Printers an – in Form versteckter Hinweise in einem eigens entwickelten Textadventure.

Auch diverse Designvorlagen werden unter Creative Commons angeboten, so zum Beispiel auf der Social-Prototyping-Plattform “Thingiverse“. Einige Beispiele, was man mit 3D-Druckern anfertigen kann, sind ein Bikini, eine Flöte, ein Fahrrad oder diese Zahnrad-Herzskulptur.

3D printing is an incredible new medium which has great potential to change the world as we know it. The ways it can empower us are in line with the philosophy of the read/write culture that Creative Commons works to support, and we should all be very excited about this.

CC News: Welcome CC Kazakhstan and CC Rwanda

Creative Commons, January 09, 2012 03:16 PM   License: Attribution 3.0 Unported

Stay up to date with CC news by subscribing to our weblog and following us on Twitter.

Happy New Year! We head into 2012 with exciting new CC developments from all over the world.

CC Kazakhstan and CC Rwanda

At the end of 2011, we announced two new CC Affiliates from Kazakhstan and Rwanda. Led by Rauan Kenzhekhanuly and including Almas Nurbakytov, Nartay Ashim and Balashov Talgat, the Kazakhstan team is supported by Wikibilim, a non-profit organisation which also operates as the local representative of Wikimedia. The Rwanda team, led by Jacques Murinda and including Fred Byabagabo and Prosper Birama, is working in conjunction with the Open Learning Exchange (OLE), an NGO supported by the Rwandan Ministry of Education, which aims to provide universal access to basic education by 2015. We welcome both these teams to our Affiliate Network, and look forward to working with them as they develop the CC community in their regions. This brings the total number of official CC Affiliates to 72, the highest level since the project launched in 2002. Read more.

Ugandan 3.0 Licenses now open for public discussion

Many of you already know that we have begun working on the next version of licenses, the 4.0 suite. Even while this process has begun, we are finishing a few remaining, important 3.0 ports. One of these is the Uganda 3.0 license suite, which we are pleased to announce is now open for public discussion. This is particularly noteworthy, as the Ugandan license suite is only the second tailored suite from the Sub-Saharan Africa region to reach the public discussion stage (after South Africa). These new licenses will be useful to many Anglophone African countries that share similar copyright laws and legal histories. We welcome all those who are interested to view the Uganda BY-NC-SA draft and contribute their comments this month. Read more.

CC and the 3D Printing Community

With the exception of CC0, the Creative Commons licenses are only for granting permissions to use non-software works. The worlds of software and engineering have additional concerns outside of the scope of what is addressed by the CC licenses. 3D printing is a new medium which encompasses both the creative domains of culture and engineering, and often 3D printed works do not fall neatly into either category. The purpose of the following article is to explore the similarities between the community that has grown around 3D printing and that of the commons which CC strives to empower. A later article will explore problems with adopting CC in the 3D printing community. Read the article here.

In other news:

  • Our campaign is still going on through January 15. If you haven't donated yet, now's your chance! (Thanks a million to those of you who have. We could not continue to exist without you.)
  • The Creative Commons Board of Directors held its year-end annual board meeting on December 9, 2011.
  • One week later, CC celebrated the 9th birthday of its license suite.
  • CC’s Russian affiliate Institute of the Information Society (IIS), in collaboration with the UNESCO Institute for Information Technologies, organized an international seminar and expert meeting last month in Moscow.
  • Lastly, we'd like to give a shout-out to some recent developments at Mozilla: the release of Mozilla Public License 2.0 and a great publication called, Learning, Freedom & the Web, based on Mozilla’s eponymous festival in Barcelona last year, published under CC BY-SA.

Banner photo: Early morning in Almaty by Irene2005 / CC BY (left) Volcano by johncooke / CC BY (right)

Musik gratis dari Freemusicarchive

CC Indonesia, January 09, 2012 06:59 AM   License: Attribution 3.0 Unported

Freemusicarchive.org telah berhasil mengumpulkan 2,3 juta musik yang dapat Anda unduh secara gratis selama tahun 2011. Untuk itu, Freemusicarchive membuat album kompilasi FrostClick/FrostWire yang kedua, setelah sebelumnya merilis album kompilasi pertama untuk merayakan 1 juta musik gratis dari 21 artis. Musik dari 18 artis di antaranya telah diunduh sebanyak 2.382.742 kali dan terus bertambah.

FrostWire Creative Commons Mixtape 2 berisikan karya dari 30 artis, 31 lagu, dan berdurasi 1 jam 57 menit. Anda dapat memperoleh album ini secara gratis dari tautan ini.

CSS text overlay image, e.g. for attribution and license notice

Mike Linksvayer, January 09, 2012 02:09 AM   License: CC0 1.0 Universal

A commenter called me on providing inadequate credit for an map image I used on this blog. I’ve often seen map credits overlaid on the bottom right of maps, so I decided to try that. I couldn’t find an example of using CSS to overlay text on an image that only showed the absolute minimum needed to achieve the effect, and explained why. Below is my attempt.

Example 1

The above may be a good example of when to not use a text overlay (there is already text at the bottom of the image), but the point is to demonstrate the effect, not to look good. I have an image and I want to overlay «Context+Colophon» at the bottom right of the image. Here’s the minimal code:

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<div style="position:relative;z-index:0;width:510px">
  <img src="http://gondwanaland.com/i/young-obama-pirate-hope.png"/>
  <div style="position:absolute;z-index:1;right:0;bottom:0">
    <a href="http://identi.ca/conversation/69446510">Context</a>+<a href="http://registry.gimp.org/node/14291">Colophon</a>
  </div>
</div>

Explanation

The outer div creates a container which the text overlay will be aligned with. A position is necessary to enable z-index, which specifies how objects will stack. Here position:relative as I want the image and overlay to flow with the rest of the post, z-index:0 as the container is at the bottom of the stack. I specify width:510px as that’s how wide the image is, and without hardcoding the size of the div, the overlay as specified will float off to the right rather than align with the image. There’s nothing special about the img; it inherits from the outer div.

The inner div contains and styles the text I want to overlay. position:absolute as I will specify an absolute offset from the container, right:0;bottom:0, and z-index:1 to place above the image. Finally, I close both divs.

That’s it. I know precious little CSS; please tell me what I got wrong.

Example 2

Above is the image that prompted this post, with added attribution and license notice. Code:

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<div style="z-index:0;position:relative;width:560px"
     xmlns:cc="http://creativecommons.org/ns#"
     about="http://gondwanaland.com/i/OpenStreetMap-Oakland-980.png">
  <a href="http://www.openstreetmap.org/?lat=37.8134&amp;lon=-122.2776&amp;zoom=14&amp;layers=Q">
    <img src="http://gondwanaland.com/i/OpenStreetMap-Oakland-980.png"/></a>
  <div style="position:absolute;z-index:1;right:0;bottom:0;">
    <small>
      © <a rel="cc:attributionURL"
           property="cc:attributionName"
           href="http://www.openstreetmap.org/?lat=37.8134&amp;lon=-122.2776&amp;zoom=14&amp;layers=Q">OpenStreetMap contributors</a>,
        <a rel="license"
           href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/">CC-BY-SA</a>
    </small>
  </div>
</div>

Explanation

With respect to the achieving the text overlay, there’s nothing in this example not in the first. Below I explain annotations added that (but are not required by) fulfillment of OpenStreetMap/CC-BY-SA attribution and license notice.

The xmlns:ccprefix, and even that may be superfluous, given cc: as a default prefix.

about sets the subject of subsequent annotations.

small isn’t an annotation, but does now seem appropriate for legal notices, and is usually rendered nicely.

rel="cc:attributionURL" says that the value of the href property is the link to use for attributing the subject. property="cc:attributionName" says that the text (“OpenStreetMap contributors”) is the name to use for attributing the subject. rel="license" says the value of its href property is the subject’s license.

If you’re bad and not using HTTPS-Everywhere (referrer not sent due to protocol change; actually I’m bad for not serving this blog over https), clicking on BY-SA above might obtain a snippet of HTML with credits for others to use. Or you can copy and paste the above code into RDFa Distiller or checkrdfa to see that the annotations are as I’ve said.

Addendum: If you’re reading this in a feed reader or aggregator, there’s a good chance inline CSS is stripped — text intended to overlay images will appear under rather than overlaying images. Click through to the post in order to see the overlays work.

New search tool

CC New Zealand, January 09, 2012 02:01 AM   License: Attribution 3.0 New Zealand

The Creative Commons Korea project has released an attractive new content search tool - making it easy to source Creative Commons licensed materials.

Przegląd linków CC #18

CC Poland, January 08, 2012 08:01 PM   License: Uznanie autorstwa 2.5 Polska

1. Zaostrza się „walka” o SOPA/PIPA, kontrowersyjne regulacje w USA mające zezwolić m.in. na blokowanie stron w ramach walki z piractwem. W zeszłym tygodniu powstała Net Coalition grupa zrzeszająca firmy internetowe przeciwne tym rozwiązaniom. W jej skład wchodzą m.in. Google, Facebook, Yahoo, Mozilla, Wikimedia Foundation, Twitter. Tymczasem twórca think-tanku liberalnego Cato Institute przeprowadził analizę wykazującą, że badani na które powołują się [...]

Ett sökverktyg för Creative Commons

CC Sweden, January 07, 2012 06:45 PM   License: Erkännande 2.5 Sverige

CC Korea har lanserat ett nytt sökverktyg för Creative Commons, som kallas LetsCC. Söktjänsten är byggd på följande tjänsters API: flickr, Jamendo, CCmixter, Youtube och Slideshare, så du kan hitta bilder, ljud, videos och presentationer och dokument som är Creative commons licensiserade.

Gränssnittet är i söktjänsten LetsCC är enkelt och användarvänligt och resultatet av en sökning kommer väldigt snabbt. Det är också lätt att få en överblick över olika medietyper som innehåller sökordet, som du söker Creative Commons licensierat material kring.

Personligen tycker jag om de enkla och tydliga förklaringarna av vad de olika licenserna innebär. Testa vetja!

Creative Commons i skolan

CC Sweden, January 07, 2012 05:40 PM   License: Erkännande 2.5 Sverige

Jag fick genom mitt arbete med Webbstjärnan syn på Petter Bergenstråhles arbete med Creative Commons och jag bad honom skriva en kort bloggpost om hur han arbetar med Creative Commons tillsammans med sina elever.

Kristina Alexanderson

Creative Commons i skolan

Upphovsrätt är svårt.

Lagarna kring upphovsrätt påverkar den digitala världen på ett helt annat sätt än den analoga. Digital information kopieras lätt, det krävs ingen ansträngning för att använda någon annans verk.

Det som finns vid mina fingertoppar är väl i rimlighetens namn mitt?

Det problematiska med upphovsrätten i skolan är att den är hindrande för elever i den digitala världen. De vill använda den där enormt häftiga bilden för att lyfta sitt arbete, och när de inte får det så blir det en negativ upplevelse.

Upphovsrätten som sådan uppfattas som negativ.

CC vänder på diskussionen
När jag startade upp arbetet med upphovsrätt i min sjua var det många frågor. De flesta handlade om varför?

Jag upplever att det är i motivationen svårigheterna finns. Elever är vana konsumenter av material på nätet, och vilken är egentligen skillnaden mellan att konsumera och producera? Varför får jag inte använda de bilder jag gillar och redan har på min dator? Vilken är skillnaden mellan att lyssna på musiken och använda den i vår film?

När ingången i diskussionen istället är CC. Det vill säga det du får använda och var och hur du kan hitta tillåtet material. Då lyfter diskussionen och eleverna blir glada när de hittar lika fantastiska bilder som de får använda. I och med att de ser att reglerna inte behöver vara en begränsning utan att det är fullt möjligt att hitta material som de får använda så blir det en positiv upplevelse. Det blir roligt att följa reglerna.

Sökmotorn CC search är en guldgruva, framförallt i kombination med flickr. Antalet bilder är mer än tillräckligt, ja till och med så stort att det kan vara svårt att välja.

Är Creative Commons krångligt?
Ja, CC licenserna kan verka krångliga. Det är kanske lite svårt att förstå vad det innebär att ett verk är CC licensierat. Det kan också vara krångligt att tala om vem som har tagit bilden jag använde. Krångligt och lite farligt eftersom jag inte är säker på om det blir rätt.

I början är det krångligt, men det är snabbt övergående. Att prata om CC, att använda termerna och de svåra orden i samtalen med eleverna förkortar startsträckan. Hör de orden, ser förkortningar och symboler ofta och mycket så förstår de snabbt hur det fungerar. Sedan behöver vi faktiskt inte göra det så svårt, det är bara att testa och prova. Det kan ju inte bli mer än fel, och fel det får vi göra hur skall vi annars lära oss.

Creative Commons gör att vi kan jobba med bloggen som verktyg i klassrummet utan att behöva bli begränsade av upphovsrättens regler. När vi lär oss det krångliga så blir det en möjlighet att utvecklas och göra något bra. Göra något som vi kan vara stolta över och visa upp för världen. Det finns en glädje i att arbeta med något som jag vet kommer synas.

Jag började med min sjua i förra veckan. Vi har pratat om licenserna och publicerat våra första bilder. Här kan ni se vårt arbete.

Interview in Have Backstage magazine // #culture #art #opinion

Christian Villum, January 07, 2012 12:48 PM   License: Navngivelse-DelPåSammeVilkår 2.5 Danmark

Just before christmas I was interviewed by the editors of online magazine Have Backstage; an interesting spin-off of Copenhagen-based pr and communication agency Have PR & Kommunikation. The article has now been published. The interview was part of a series of interviews with Danish entrepreneurs on the alternative cultural scene and focused on the opportunities available for artists and cultural producers in the digital realm. The headline (translated to English) is something like "The digital domain is a resource, not a threat" and discuss art, culture, digital-analog challenges and much more. Read the article here.&

Stop U.S. legislation that would block public access to publicly funded research

Creative Commons, January 07, 2012 01:10 AM   License: Attribution 3.0 Unported

In December 2011 the U.S. House of Representatives introduced The Research Works Act (H.R.3699), a bill that will ban public access to publicly funded research. SPARC says, “Essentially, the bill seeks to prohibit federal agencies from conditioning their grants to require that articles reporting on publicly funded research be made accessible to the public online.” The bill was introduced by Reps. Darrell Issa (R-CA) and Carolyn Maloney (D-NY). The sponsorship by Issa is odd considering his strong support for OPEN Act, the tolerable alternative to the SOPA/PIPA legislation. The bill stands in stark contrast to OSTP’s recent request for ideas about how the U.S. government can support public access to federally funded research articles and digital data (note: you can still submit comments until January 12 to the OSTP call). One of the primary proponents of the The Research Works Act is The Association of American Publishers, who describe the bill in a press release:

The Research Works Act will prohibit federal agencies from unauthorized free public dissemination of journal articles that report on research which, to some degree, has been federally-funded but is produced and published by private sector publishers receiving no such funding. It would also prevent non-government authors from being required to agree to such free distribution of these works. Additionally, it would preempt federal agencies’ planned funding, development and back-office administration of their own electronic repositories for such works, which would duplicate existing copyright-protected systems and unfairly compete with established university, society and commercial publishers.

The legislation would be toxic for progressive initiatives such as the NIH’s Public Access Policy, which requires scientists to submit final peer-reviewed journal manuscripts that arise from NIH funds to the PubMed Central digital archive. PubMed Central provides free public access to research the public pays for. SPARC’s Alliance for Taxpayer Access website has outlined specific ways that supporters of public access can speak out against this proposed legislation. Especially helpful is contacting the Congressional offices listed below. Please voice your support for public access to publicly funded research.

Representative Issa
@DarrellIssa
http://issa.house.gov/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=597&Itemid=73
Fax: (202) 225-3303

Representative Maloney
@RepMaloney
https://maloney.house.gov/contact-me/email-me (Using zip code 10128-3679)
Fax: (202) 225-4709

Members of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee – especially if you’re a constituent.
http://1.usa.gov/zDqnne

Your representative – through the Alliance for Taxpayer Access Action Center: http://www.congressweb.com/cweb2/index.cfm/siteid/sparc

Layanan Pencarian Ciptaan dengan #lisensiCC dari CC Korea

CC Indonesia, January 06, 2012 09:46 AM   License: Attribution 3.0 Unported

CC Korea telah membuka layanan pencarian LetsCC: http://www.cckorea.org/xe/?mid=english&document_srl=100195.

LetsCC menawarkan akses cepat dan mudah terhadap beberapa ciptaan berlisensi CC selayaknya search.creativecommons.org. LetsCC juga menggunakan API yang tersedia pada Flickr, Jamendo, ccMixter, Youtube and Slideshare, sehingga Anda dapat mencari gambar, suara, video, dan dokumen berlisensi CC melalui satu cara. Anda juga dapat menyimpan konten favorit Anda, menandainya, mencarinya, dan mengetahui konten yang paling diminati pengunjung.

Walau demikian, LetsCC masih dalam pengembangan untuk terus menjadi lebih baik. Anda dapat menggunakan LetsCC dan mengirimkan kritik dan saran Anda ke creative@cckorea.org.

Saat ini, LetsCC juga tersedia dalam bahasa Inggris: http://eng.letscc.net

知识共享中国大陆电子通讯Newsletter第十六期

CC China Mainland, January 06, 2012 05:48 AM   License: 署名 2.5 中国大陆

2012年1月4日 第十六期 newsletter

CC协议4.0版本开始公开讨论
对知识共享许可协议4.0版本的公共讨论开始了。

自2002年以来,知识共享组织已经对CC许可协议进行了三次版本更新,最近的一次(CC协议3.0版本)更新于2007年初。目前,全球已有超过50亿作品通过CC协议在互联网公开发布。

今天,作为公众交流工具的CC许可协议正迅速发展成为共享文化以及教育、政府、科学的全球标准。在波兰举行的2011年CC全球峰会确认应尽快开始4.0版本的讨论。而现在,4.0版本的公开讨论正式拉开序幕。

为了确保CC协议4.0版本更加切合CC国际未来的愿景和使命,我们鼓励各司法管辖区公众积极参与到本次讨论当中。本次讨论将在CC Wiki网站的4.0版本讨论页面(http://wiki.creativecommons.org/4.0 )举行。欢迎大家参与。

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CC国际资讯

UNESCO德国发布“开放内容许可协议实用指南”

http://cn.creativecommons.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/图片1.jpg

德国联合国科教文组织委员会已经发布了名为“开放内容许可协议——实用指南”。的出版物。该出版物解释了如何使用开放协议,它将CC的协议套件的作为一个主要的使用例子。尽管该出版物是对公司,机构和组织量身定制的,该指南也是一个非常小巧的,可以为那些对于如何使用CC协议来协助他们工作感兴趣的人来使用。该出版物是在CC BY-NC协议下发表的,它及时跟进联合国教科文组织和英联邦学习共同体的相关出版物。

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欧洲数字图书馆发布《授权协议框架文本》
2011年12月1日,欧洲数字图书馆通过CC0协议发布了《欧洲数字图书馆授权协议框架文本》。该文本是《数据交换协议》的后续文件,也是对该协议的补充。欧洲数字图书馆于今年九月采用了《数据交换协议》,欧洲各国图书馆在几周后都公开表示支持该协议。

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调查报告显示用开放协议发布公共领域信息收益明显大于成本

目前,世界各地越来越多的政府机构开始使用开放协议发布公共领域信息。2011年9月,约翰•霍顿向澳大利亚国家数据服务中心,提交了一份题为“信息公开的成本与收益”的调查报告,深入研究了政府公开公共领域信息的短期及长期的成本和收益。该报告得出重要结论:采用知识共享协议发布政府信息收益明显大于成本。

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西班牙首部CC影片Interferències上映

2011年11月18日,首部使用CC协议(BY-NC-SA)发布的西班牙影片Interferències(意为“对抗”)在西班牙影院首映。这部影片旨在教育和启迪民众,使其认清当前世界的经济和社会形势。Interferències是一个由Debt Observatory(ODG)和Quepo共同发起的视听教育项目,包括影片和网站两部分。Interferències从发起之初就是一个开放和共享的项目,该项目的网站为个人和组织提供大量的教育资料、话题和教学建议。

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知识共享组织积极参加WIPO发展与知识产权委员会活动

近日,CC哥斯达黎加项目成员Andres Guadamuz代表知识共享组织在世界知识产权组织(WIPO)发展与知识产权委员会(CDIP)第八次会议开幕式上发言。按照日程,本次会议将审议几份未决的建议,并讨论CDIP的未来工作。

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了解更多关于知识共享CC的相关消息请访问:
CC中国大陆项目网站:http://cn.creativecommons.org/

CC项目LOGO

编辑: 刘  萍 资讯翻译:张文峰、孙蓓蓓、季从芳
Creative Commons License 除非另有声明,本期内容均采用知识共享署名 2.5 中国大陆许可协议进行许可。

Przewodnik po otwartości dla publicznych instytucji kultury

CC Poland, January 05, 2012 06:01 PM   License: Uznanie autorstwa 2.5 Polska

Jak zwiększać dostęp do kultury i wspierać twórczość z wykorzystaniem nowych technologii cyfrowych? Na czym polega filozofia otwartości? Jakie wyzwania stoją przed instytucjami kultury? Między innymi na te pytania odpowiada wspólna publikacja Gdańsk 2016 i Creative Commons Polska. „Otwartość w publicznych instytucjach kultury” to zbiór tekstów poświęconych otwartym modelom prawa autorskiego adresowany bezpośrednio do instytucji kultury. W publikacji, dostępnej [...]

2011年計畫回顧

CC Taiwan, January 05, 2012 01:46 PM   License: 姓名標示-相同方式分享 3.0 台灣

Creative Commons剛過9歲生日,台灣創用CC計畫在地經營也堂堂向第9年挺進。

回顧2011。年初,很高興有機會與部落格廣告行銷BlogAD協力舉辦「我的原創吶喊」網路活動,讓更多的網友們對於創用CC授權有清楚正確的認識。3月我們搬進了新家,同時,計畫網站也以清新的風格與大家見面,希望能提供更貼近使用者需求的服務。任何使用上的建議,都歡迎隨時與我們聯繫

而暑假原本預計執行的專題獎助研究計畫,因投稿狀況不佳而喊卡。不過2012年,我們仍會再接再厲,調整宣傳方式,讓自由文化議題在研究領域持續被關注。

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Jurnal Ilmiah tentang Mengenal Teknologi dengan #lisensiCC BY 3.0

CC Indonesia, January 05, 2012 10:12 AM   License: Attribution 3.0 Unported

Research in Learning Technology adalah jurnal dari Association for Learning Technology (Asosiasi Pendidikan Teknologi) yang ditujukan untuk meningkatkan penelitian dalam pengenalan teknologi, mendorong pelaksanaan penelitian sebagai contoh praktik yang baik, dan berkontribusi dalam pengembangan kebijakan. Jurnal ini berisikan makalah tentang penggunaan teknologi dalam proses belajar mengajar di sektor pendidikan maupun industri.

Jurnal ini telah diterbitkan sejak tahun 1993 dan sekarang Anda bisa mendapatkannya secara gratis melalui tautan ini.

Η πρώτη Ισπανική ταινία με άδεια Creative Commons παρουσιάστηκε στους Ισπανικούς Κινηματογράφους

CC Greece, January 05, 2012 10:00 AM   License: Αναφορά Δημιουργού 3.0 Ελλάδα

Βγήκε στην Ισπανία η πρώτη ταινία με άδεια Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-SA) στους τοπικούς κινηματογράφους. Η ταινία με τίτλο Interferències, είναι ένα οπτικοακουστικό project με εκπαιδευτικό χαρακτήρα, δημιούργημα του Debt Observatory (ODG) και Quepo. Στόχος του project είναι να ενημερώσει και να κινήσει το ενδιαφέρον γύρω από την παγκόσμια οικονομική και οικονομική  κατάσταση.

Ugandan 3.0 Licenses now open for public discussion

Creative Commons, January 05, 2012 01:36 AM   License: Attribution 3.0 Unported

Many who follow Creative Commons and its work already know that we have begun working on the next version of licenses, the 4.0 suite. Even while this process has begun, we are finishing a few remaining, important 3.0 ports.

One of these is the Uganda 3.0 license suite, which we are pleased to announce is now open for public discussion. This is particularly noteworthy, as the Ugandan license suite is only the second tailored suite from the Sub-Saharan Africa region to reach the public discussion stage (after South Africa). These new licenses will be useful to many Anglophone African countries that share similar copyright laws and legal histories.

We welcome all those who are interested to view the Uganda BY-NC-SA draft and contribute their comments this month. The next step for the Ugandan team will be to incorporate changes from the public discussion and to prepare the remaining five licenses for a complete Uganda 3.0 license suite.

A huge thank you to CC’s Ugandan Affiliate, the National Book Trust of Uganda (NABOTU) and the Centre for Health, Human Rights and Development (CEHURD), and the large CC Uganda Team led by Moses Mulumba for all their hard work!

CC and the 3D Printing Community

Creative Commons, January 04, 2012 07:59 PM   License: Attribution 3.0 Unported


Time-Lapse of a RepRap Printing Interlocking Rings by Jonathan Palecek / CC BY.

With the exception of CC0, the Creative Commons licenses are only for granting permissions to use non-software works. The worlds of software and engineering have additional concerns outside of the scope of what is addressed by the CC licenses. 3D printing is a new medium which encompasses both the creative domains of culture and engineering, and often 3D printed works do not fall neatly into either category. The purpose of this article is to explore the similarities between the community that has grown around 3D printing and that of the commons which CC strives to empower. A later article will explore problems with adopting CC in the 3D printing community.

3D printing is still very much a niche, and so a brief explanation is in order before discussing the culture behind it. 3D fabrication technologies are essential in contemporary manufacturing, and a wide variety exist. 3D printing generally speaks of what is called an “additive” process; in which an object is realized by building up layers of solid material. RepRaps and Makerbots – two types of 3D printers discussed in this article – are additive printers that typically print in plastic.

The role of 3D fabrication in our society is wide reaching, from being an essential stage in developing molds of parts for mass production, to enabling contemporary architects to produce novel designs that would have been impossible to construct only a few decades ago. It is a process that is so pervasive behind the scenes of every day life, yet entirely invisible to most individuals. Up until recently the cost of the machinery involved had limited the use of the technology. And so despite the incredible flexibility of the medium, it remains to be fairly obscure.

In 2004, the RepRap project set out to produce a low cost design for a 3D printer capable of printing all of its own parts. While the current designs are able to print some of their own parts – about 40% for the Prusa Mendel – the rest of the parts consist of generic standard hardware, most of which is available at local stores. The project has been successful in accomplishing the low cost goal – a RepRap costs about $700 or so to build. A large portion of why the RepRap is so interesting is that the schematics are released under the GNU GPL copyleft license. This means that anyone can copy and improve the project as long as they share alike their modifications, just as one must with GPL’ed free and open source software.

RepRaps are notorious for requiring some technical skill – and a good deal of patience – to build and operate. This is especially true with the project’s earlier designs. Makerbots were derived from the early RepRap designs, but were refined to be more accessible. Makerbot kits are available for about $1300 and are said to be only as complex as an Ikea furniture set. One can purchase a fully assembled Makerbot for about $2500. Widespread home adoption is still unlikely in the near future due to cost. However, these printers are affordable for small businesses and schools, potentially giving them a much greater social impact than their significantly more expensive ancestors.

Makerbot – the company that produces Makerbots – is a wonderful example of open hardware done right in a business. The free and open hardware designs from the early RepRap project made Makerbots as we know them possible. In turn, the accessibility of Makerbots allowed the low cost 3D printing community to grow rapidly in numbers. Because the designs for the printers were released under an open license, individuals in the community were free to design their own upgrades. Many of these upgrades were adopted back into the standard product design. Perhaps the single greatest contribution by Makerbot to the RepRap project was developing a stronger 3D printing community, bringing in new talent to the RepRap project.

If Makerbot were ran like an old-school business – one with clandestine trade secrets and which considers its customers to be consumers and not kin – the community could not have grown as it did. Makerbot’s customer base would have been severely limited. Similarly, if the RepRap project had chosen a non-commercial approach to licensing, it would not have been able to empower Makerbot to bootstrap the community as it did. This feedback loop between community and commerce is what powers this new medium’s ability to change the world as we know it. The phenomena observed here is not unique to open hardware; it is often seen at work in the free software realm, and can work well with free culture.

Thingiverse – a social site run by Makerbot – provides a basic framework for tracking derivative work from project to project. Some works on the site see little interest from other members. Other works spawn an endless tree of variations. “Screwless Heart Gears” by [Emmett] is a popular model on thingiverse which exists in one of the branches of such a tree of derivative works. Thingiverse’s framework assumes that a derivative work only has one ancestor, which is not always accurate. And some times the ancestor is off site. Judging from the comments, the root of this tree would be this video. From this inspiration, [Greg Frost] created a program – released under the GNU LGPL license – that generates similar gears, and his own version of the “Broken Heart” model, also released under the LGPL license. [Emmett] used this program to generate the “Cube Gears” model (released under the CC-BY-SA license), from which there are many derivatives by a variety of individuals. The broken heart model ended up going through a variety of revisions just as well as it spawned many interesting variations.

The broken heart model illustrates both the new potential for incredible works to be produced. Artists and engineers are able to collaborate to produce objects with both cultural value and dynamic mechanical aspects. The variations of the broken heart model happened candidly – people worked on it for the fun of it. The broken heart model also illuminates legal gray area. The legal dangers of this sort of gray are very well covered by the paper “It Will Be Awesome if They Don’t Screw it Up: 3D Printing, Intellectual Property, and the Fight Over the Next Great Disruptive Technology“, written by Micheal Weinberg.

3D printing is an incredible new medium which has great potential to change the world as we know it. The ways it can empower us are in line with the philosophy of the read/write culture that Creative Commons works to support, and we should all be very excited about this.

Peluncuran Mozilla Public License 2.0

CC Indonesia, January 04, 2012 12:27 PM   License: Attribution 3.0 Unported

Mozilla telah meluncurkan Mozilla Public License 2.0, salah satu lisensi untuk perangkat lunak terbuka dan gratis dan saat ini digunakan secara langsung pada peramban Mozilla Firefox. Mozilla Public License 2.0 juga saat ini bersesuaian dengan GPL, lisensi perangkat lunak terbuka dan gratis yang paling terkenal. Lisensi CC memang tidak direkomendasikan untuk digunakan pada perangkat lunak, kecuali Dedikasi Domain Publik CC0. Hal ini akan dibahas lebih lanjut dalam pengembangan lisensi CC versi selanjutnya.

Sebagai tambahan referensi mengenai lisensi pada perangkat lunak, Anda dapat membaca tulisan ini: Make Your Open Source Software GPL-Compatible. Or Else. (Bahasa Inggris)

2012.01.18 我國公開資料加值(open data)推動策略會議

CC Taiwan, January 04, 2012 08:45 AM   License: 姓名標示-相同方式分享 3.0 台灣

開放政府資料(Open Government Data)最近真是相當火紅的議題。去年12月中剛在中研院辦完「開放政府資料:現況、願景、策略」座談會。緊接著,行政院科技顧問組著眼於「透過政府公開資料加值,帶動臺灣創新服務,促進產業發展」,也將於2012/01/18舉行「2012年我國公開資料加值(Open Data)推動策略會議」

開放政府資料後,可以怎麼加值應用?

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The hangover after Public Domain Day…

Communia Association, January 04, 2012 08:34 AM   License: CC0 1.0 Universal

This post by Lucie Guibault was first published on the Kluwer Copyright Blog and is reproduced here with kind permission of the author.

The New Year’s festivities are just behind us and with these the celebrations around Public Domain Day 2012 that took place in different cities in and outside Europe (Warsaw, Zurich, Turin, Rome, Haifa etc.).

2012 brings with it the joy of using James Joyce’s masterpieces without asking the estate for prior authorization (which more often than not met with a ‘no’ for an answer!). No one needs to be afraid of using the works of Virginia Woolf any longer! And the fans of Arsène Lupin, the French ‘gentleman burglar’, are now able to borrow – for good! – the ideas of its author, Maurice Leblanc. The works of several music composers are also free for reuse, including those of Frank Bridge and Johan Wagenaar.

The Public Domain Day IS important and SHOULD be celebrated annually, for it gives us the occasion to reflect on the significance of works of past authors and to measure the wealth of our common knowledge and culture. But unlike the New Year’s celebrations, however, those of the Public Domain Day do not attract much attention among the general public. Festivities of this sort are usually low-key, taking place in libraries, universities or cafés and gathering only the selected few of the well informed and culturally savvy.

Any cramped optimism concerning the public domain is further discouraged by the fact that the term of protection for copyright and related rights is 1) highly unharmonized across jurisdictions and 2) still being strechted beyond recognition through constant legislative action.

As an illustration of the first point, let me mention the case of world famous writer Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961) whose works have fallen into the public domain two days ago in Canada, but neither in his home country, the United States, or in Europe, where copyright lasts for the life of the author + 70 years.

In Europe, the calculation of the term of protection for copyright and related rights is rendered particularly complex due to the lack of proper harmonisation of the governing rules in EU jurisdictions. Although the adoption of the EC Term Directive was an attempt to alleviate disparities between the Member States, harmonisation gaps persist. As a result, the composition of the public domain will differ depending on the country in which protection is sought, as works fall out of copyright on different dates in different EU jurisdictions. This effect is illustrated in the Public Domain Calculators by the need for separate calculators, giving upon occasion very different results, for each of the 30 jurisdictions covered, including the 27, ostensibly harmonised, EU Member States.

In relation to the second point, 2012 will inevitably see the first pieces of national legislation emerge in the EU Member States towards the implementation of Directive 2011/77/EU amending Directive 2006/116/EC on the term of protection of copyright and certain related rights. Through this statutory amendment only sound recordings published or communicated to the public before 1941 will be free for use. In practical terms, this means that none, not even the early recordings, of Maria Callas will be available for re-use without prior authorization of the record company holding the rights.

Finally, the march towards term extension does not seem to have reached its limit if one only takes a look at the clauses contained in bilateral and mulilateral trade agreements currently negotiated by the United States. Article 4.5 of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, for example, would bring the copyright term of protection of signatory countries up to the American (and European) level, as has been the case in the past in the context of bilateral agreements (with Australia and many countries of Central and South America, to name but these).

These are very sobering thoughts indeed! If the alcohol fumes of the New Year’s party still had any effect, one could even be tempted, for simplicity’s sake, to just make copyright protection perpetual…