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Category: CCUK (last modified: April 13, 2006, at 11:11 AM)

13 April 2006: iCommons Summit Announced

iCommons Summit, Rio de Janeiro, 23-25 June, 2006 www.icommons.org "Towards a global digital commons"

The past few years has seen the burgeoning of a number of initiatives aimed at opening the fields of creativity, science and knowledge in communities around the world. Practitioners from these movements currently identify themselves as falling within a particular community – 'free and open source software', 'open access', 'open content' and 'open science', amongst others – but they share key processes and values whose common elements are yet to be fully realized.

This year's iCommons Summit aims to bring together, in a creative, stimulating and cooperative environment, the pioneers from these communities – to inspire and learn from one another and establish closer working relationships around a set of incubator projects. With participation by commons communities from Creative Commons, Wikipedia, Science Commons, Ubuntu, A2K and others, this year's Summit is set to be one of the most exciting events for creative and knowledge commons pioneers from around the world.

2 December 2005: Creative Commons Scotland 2.5 licences issued

At long last, a full set of licences for Creative Commons in Scotland has now been issued. These are accessible at the Creative Commons 'Choose a License' page. The licences have been extensively rewritten, building not only on the experience gained in the past year, and are fully compatible with the international licence. Much care has been put into writing them, so far as possible, in plain English. This site, however, will include the full text of the licence with comment and explanations: soon, we hope!

These licences will now, it is planned, be the basis of revised England and Wales licences to be written in the near future.

15 October 2005: Suitability of Creative Commons for the UK Public Sector analysed in new report

The Common Information Environment (CIE) today published the results of a study into the applicability of the international Creative Commons licenses to a range of UK public sector resources.

The study was undertaken for the CIE by Intrallect and the AHRC Research Centre for Studies in Intellectual Property & Technology Law at the University of Edinburgh.

The report, licensed with a Creative Commons Attribution licence to encourage dissemination and reuse of the findings, is available for download, along with a comprehensive set of appendices.

The CIE members are currently considering the report's recommendations.

2nd August 2005: We're not afraid!

Creative Commons and www.werenotafraid.com (WNA) today announced a landmark partnership whereby WNA will incorporate Creative Commons licensing into the WNA site, upcoming Proud Gallery exhibit and the ‘We’re Not Afraid’ book. By using the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0 license, people around the world will be able to legally copy, redistribute and adapt the images that are made available (provided that they make any adaptations available under the same license terms).

25 June 2005: Coming to you live from Boston

CC-UK is now present in the iCommons summit with representatives of both England and Wales and Scotland. This is a very exciting event, more news about what is to happen coming soon. Breaking news? The "Generic" licence will soon be converted into the "United States" licence.

24 June 2005: Website goes live

This website, which is run as a wiki jointly edited by members of the England & Wales and Scotland projects, was launched. It will be expanded. Any news items, comments, or suggestions: to anyone in either project team, or to the mailing list.

31 May 2005: Creative Commons Scotland licences in final draft form

Successive drafts of the proposed Scottish licence were posted here and version 1.4.2 was sent to International Creative Commons on 31 May; they expect to deal with it by August. Comments are still welcomed!

11 May 2005: Creative Commons research project commences

Following an open tendering process, the Common Information Environment Group has awarded a contract for a study into the applicability of Creative Commons licences to public sector organisations in the United Kingdom. The work is being undertaken by Intrallect and the AHRC Research Centre for Studies in Intellectual Property and Technology Law at the University of Edinburgh, and their final report is due by the end of August. This work is being funded by Becta, the British Library, DfES, JISC and MLA on behalf of the CIE.

22 April 2005: Open University course on Creative Commons

The Open University have released their Law, the Internet and Society course under a Creative Commons licence.

13 April 2005: BBC announce Creative Archive Licence Group

The BBC, with Channel 4 and others, have set up a group to manage their plan to release a substantial part of their archive to the public under a CC-like licence. Details are still awaited...

2 April 2005: Creative Commons Scotland project launch

Creative Commons Scotland formally launched in Edinburgh on 2 April 2005, when Professor Lawrence Lessig, the chair of Creative Commons, spoke publicly to a large audience on "Cyberlaw: who controls access to ideas on the net", with Bill Thompson and Andres Guadumuz. Pictures, a review, and another review.

10 March 2005: Creative Commons England and Wales licences are available

Finally after 16 months of intensive public consultation and high powered legal work the Creative Commons licences for England and Wales are now ready. CCEW celebrated their launch at the wonderful October Gallery with John Perry Barlow on 10 March 2005. Here are some pictures and a video.

Creative Commons Weblog- CC worldwide:-

Amazing entries at the Crammed Discs Remix Contest

The Crammed Discs Remix Contest at ccMixter only began accepting submissions yesterday, and we've already got a few incredible entries. A couple of early faves: "Psychedelic Hospital" by Lipo (also known as NOMANSLAND on ccMixter) and the "Sanidade" remix by Foundation IV.

Calling all producers: you've got about a month left to enter the fray! Visit ccMixter to download audio source files from Cibelle, DJ Dolores, and Apollo Nove (all offered to the public for free under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.5 license), and use them to make your own remixes. Nine winning tracks will appear on a Crammed/ccMixter remix project to be sold online through digital music stores. For more information, please see our press release.

Reopening the Sundman files

Gonzo SF novelist John Sundman was an early adopter of Creative Commons and of publishing books on the web before Creative Commons existed. About three years ago I read his first two books, Acts of the Apostles and Cheap Complex Devices (both highly recommended) and intended to interview him shortly after. The interview didn't happen (entirely my fault), but with serialization of The Pains now is an opportune time to reopen the Sundman files...

Three years ago you licensed two books under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs license, now you're serializing a third, The Pains, under the current version of the same license. As a repeat user, how has Creative Commons and this license worked for you?

The biggest consequence of my using the Creative Commons license has been the change in my own head.

In 1999, in what was a relatively rare move at the time, I put the first 13 chapters of Acts of the Apostles, in HTML, up on my website wetmachine. This was a teaser, about one third of the book. If you wanted to read the rest of the story, you had to buy the book from me. This strategy worked very well. I was a totally unknown, self-published author, and within a few months I was getting book orders from everywhere. Michigan! Florida! Saskatchewan! Korea! Sweden! Singapore! I was so paranoid about "losing sales" to people who would read the whole book online that I didn't even have the sources on a machine that was connected to the Internet.

In 2002, I put the first bit of Cheap Complex Devices online in HTML, and made the PDF of the whole book available for five bucks. This was an honor system, no DRM, and I was nervous about it. I sold about a hundred such licenses, which was a pretty easy way to earn $$.

Then I went to Etech in 2003 and found out about Creative Commons, and impulsively in the spirit of the moment, I put the complete sources to both books up. I actually did this while at Etech, with the help of Rusty Foster, of Kuro5hin fame.

Already my thinking had started to change. Whereas before I had been concerned about "canabalizing" sales of my books (and ebooks), I had started to become more concerned with creating a wider audience. I saw what Cory Doctorow was doing, self-promotionwise, and it was clear that he was a rising star. Now, I love Cory and his books, but I don't think they're any better than my own, so I had to ask myself "why him and not me"? And part of the answer, in addition to his incredible work ethic and outgoing personality and sheer volume of output, was that he was giving his stuff away, and even encouraging people to mash it up. "Mashing up" was and still is considered "ripping off" by lots and lots of people -- I used to be in that camp -- and so his way of looking at things was a challenge to me. But the results were good for him, and besides, it looked like fun.

People continue to download my books and they continue to buy print copies. I assume that having the free PDFs has contributed to my overall sales rate of printed books, but I have no way to test that hypothesis. It's not like I'm getting rich off of this hobby, by the way. In a good year I make a few thousand bucks. I could probably make more money with a lemonade stand. But I'm certain that having the books available has made them more visible, and has made self publishing at least plausible, and more fun. People assume self-published books suck, and I used to spend a lot of energy defending myself to cynics and skeptics. But when your books are completely available for free online, you don't have to spend any energy at all trying to convince people that you are a legitimate writer. And now Cory Doctorow has initiated this meme that I'm a "gonzo SF novelist." Hey look, I'm a rock star! That's kind of neat.

The reason I like the Creative Commons "no derivatives" license is that I think at least one of my books would make a great movie, and it would piss me off no end if some big corporate studio were to get rich off of it and not compensate me. I don't like big media companies, in general. So Creative Commons makes me feel like I'm not totally naked in that respect. (Not that I think that was a likely development, but one never knows, does one?)

Nowadays I don't spend any energy at all worrying about how to "protect" my investment in writing. I just don't think about it. Rather, I think about how to make more of the opportunities afforded by today's technology. I'm pretty old fashioned in a lot of ways and I'm not of the gee-whiz camp that a lot of your readers are. I'm more of a technoparanoid than a champion of the future. But I figure that I'm not going to stop the tide, so I might as well have some fun surfing.

Thanks for that very informative answer. I hate to be a pain but there's an obvious followup. The "no derivatives" part of the license is a blanket prohibition on derivative works (excepting fair use of course), including noncommercial "mash ups." The noncommercial provision by itself prevents big corporate studios (or anyone) from making money with your work without first negotiating with you. Usually people use a "no derivatives" license because they don't want their message changed or in the interest of artistic integrity. Could you expand on why you chose "no derivatives" or perhaps consider switching to a license that allows derivatives as Cory did after a year? :-)

For the time being I think I'll leave as is for three reasons:

1) Because the artwork is copyrighted to the artist, Matthew Frederick Davis Hemming, I don't want to offer a blanket release on rights to my part of the book lest there be any confusion about that. He and I have not worked out how we feel about modifications to " the-thing-as-it-is". Also, because the roll-out is incremental and so forth, I'm exploring new territory. Therefore I want to control some of the variables.

2) In the case of a translation into a foreign language, I would at least like to discuss the approach with the translator. Especially since that's a case that naturally lends itself to financial transactions. I do point out that in the cases where I've been approached for translation rights to Acts of the Apostles, I have given them, with no charge. I don't know if the translations ever appeared, although I do know a translation into Russian was at least begun.

3) I'm lazy and don't want to bother updating the website, or even thinking any more about this, before you post the blog entry.

I'm especially sympathetic with the third reason given that it's taken me three years to conduct this interview. Thanks again for the informative answers and good luck with The Pains serialization!

Check out John Sundman's books on wetmachine.com.

Summer of Code student proposals open May 1

As previously announced Creative Commons is participating in Google's Summer of Code as a mentoring organization. Please visit our summer of code ideas page and if you're a student, start working on a proposal.

An over-the-top ideal proposal would include support for RDFa, remixing, and affordances for educational and worldwide (not just wealthy regions) use. Ability to release under an open source license and incorporation of some Creative Commons affordance are necessary. However, a solid proposal is far more important than buzzword compliance. Please read Google's Summer of Code Student FAQ and advice from past participants as you create your proposal. Good luck!

Coincidentally Chris DiBona, Google's Open Source Programs Manager, will be speaking at the next CC Salon San Francsico on May 10, two days after the SoC student proposal submission period ends.

The Only Way To Spend World IP Day

April 26, 2006 has been designated by WIPO member states as "World IP Day." The aim of the day is to "to raise awareness of the role of intellectual property in our daily lives, and to celebrate the contribution made by innovators and artists to the development of societies across the globe."

The theme of this year's event is "the power of ideas as the seedbed for innovation and creativity." As we all know, ideas - at least in copyright - are not subject to protection and hence why they can form the seedbed for innovation and creativity - because they can be borrowed and shared and freely disseminated around the globe. A list of events taking place around the world is provided here. One event which was omitted from this list is the event which took place last night, a gathering in Second Life to discuss the topic "21st Century Creativity in a Copyright World: How Can the Potential Be Realised?".

It was an interesting and wide-ranging discussion - including the forced shut down of Richard Neville's satirical site pretending to be that of the Australian Prime Minister apologising about the Iraq war, the American Edit shut down, the trials and tribulations of securing podcasting licenses from British music rights societies ? among other topics.

Really, is there any better way to acknowledge World IP Day than surrounded by people dressed as avatars dressed as green men and devils, and fire hydrants and post boxes? (...and don't you just hate it when you avatar blinks in photos)

The Dream of a Virtual European Digital Library - Will CC Licensing Play a Role?

The European Commission is investigating a digital libraries initiative that "aims at making European information resources easier and more interesting to use in an online environment." As part of a background paper, the Commission discussed the range of technical, legal, operational and financial challenges such an initiative would encounter and specifically noted that Creative Commons licenses provide an example of "[v]oluntary sharing of content that can have an important place in shaping the common information sphere." (at p13)

As part of its investigation into the feasibility of a virtual European Library, the Commission conducted an online consultation which had questions ranging from topics such as digitisation and online accessibility, orphan works, public domain materials and digital preservation issues. Creative Commons submitted comments, as did some 200 other organizations. CC licensing was mentioned in as many as 60 different comments.

The Commission has now released an overview of the results of its online consulation in English, in French and in German. Creative Commons licensing is mentioned in the overview as one of the suggested measures to enable accessibility to copyrighted materials whilst also respecting the legitimate interests of the author and as a means to render more transparent and widely known the availability of public domain and other material to facilitate its subsequent use.

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