Home | About | RSS Feed | Contact and Publicity Guidelines | Comment Policy the Law, the Universe, and Everything 

advertise-here4


Slip Opinions


Groundhog Day. (fp)

Banned in Tucson. (kw)

The Best and Worst of 2011 in Race and Law (kw)

Tortured to death for trespassing. (fp)

Drones of contention. (fp)

DOJ still coddling banks. (fp)

Creative destruction? Thank banks. (fp)

Blog about a new book, on how to talk to little girls--stressing smarts not cutes.   LAC

Macey on the heroic Rakoff. (fp)

Captured NY Fed. (fp)


solicitors

Our Podcast

Subscribe to Law Talk

law-rev-contents2.jpg


  • Posts by Author

  • Categories

  • Archives


  • Recent Comments


    • Three Oranges on Physical Punishment and Parental Rights

    • Paul Robichaux on Physical Punishment and Parental Rights

    • JR on Physical Punishment and Parental Rights

    • Jan on Physical Punishment and Parental Rights

    • Mark on Physical Punishment and Parental Rights

    • Shag from Brookline on Omelets and Eggs

    • Shag from Brookline on Omelets and Eggs

    • Joe on What Exactly is Wrong With Polygamy?

    • Phil on What Exactly is Wrong With Polygamy?

    • Lee on Lifecycles and the Firm

    • Car accident claim lawyers on Symposium Next Week on "A Legal Theory for Autonomous Artificial Agents"

    • Andrew MacKie-Mason on Can't the Supreme Court Just Say No to Cameras?

    • Joe on Employment Division v. Smith is Wrong

    • Shag from Brookline on Employment Division v. Smith is Wrong

    • Joe on Employment Division v. Smith is Wrong
  •  

    Site Meter

    About the Blog

    Concurring Opinions is a multiple authored, general interest legal blog.

    (Image: Wikicommons)

Public Service for Creative Commons

posted by Deven Desai

Folks,

If you don’t know Mike Carroll, fix that. He is currently a visiting professor at American University and an all-around great person. In addition to many accomplishments such as publishing insightful articles and running Carrollogos, Mike is on the board of Creative Commons. He has circulated an email on the Cyberprof listserv regarding Creative Commons and its needs. Mike has allowed me to publish it here.

If you know you want to give to Creative Commons do so here. If you need more information, please take a read and contact Mike with further questions.

BEGIN EMAIL:

Dear all,

In the past, Mark has been gracious enough to allow me to address a year-end pitch to the list, and I hope that is still okay. As one of the Board members of Creative Commons, I am duty bound to help find support for the organization, and members of this list have been very generous in the past. Thank you for that, and I hope you can continue that support. We close our annual campaign on December 31st.

In the past, members of this list have been generous supports, and I thank you for that. I have heard from some folks who want to know what is the work that requires further support. Essentially, there are 5 areas of activity that are likely to be of interest: Law, Culture, Education, Science, and Tech. If this is the kind of work you care to support, please visit Creative Commons’ Support page.

Law. CC now is in different stages of progress with 50 jurisdictions around the world that have ported CC licenses or are in the process of doing so. The professional network engaged in this work is a remarkable group who are self-funded, but CC staff must coordinate the activities of this growing group. Working in coordination with this group, CC is in the process of splitting the public domain dedication tool into two pieces. One, which is about to be released, is CC0 – a public domain dedication/copyright waiver tool. http://wiki.creativecommons.org/CC0. In 2009, with support, we hope to launch a public domain assertion tool that will allow a person to make a machine-readable and human-readable assertion that a work is in the public domain and to provide metadata identifying the factual basis for the assertion (e.g. publication date) and the identity of the person or entity making the assertion.

Culture. CC licenses continue to become recognized by professional creators, like Nine Inch Nails, as well as a range of amateurs and the Web 2.0 businesses built around amateur creation. There’s been continued growth in the use of the licenses across the range of human creativity.

Education. ccLearn is working with the open education community to be more self-aware of copyright licensing choices being made with respect to Open CourseWare and other open educational resources.

Science. We have a research project called Neurocommons, which aims to demonstrate the power of open access combined with Semantic Web technologies to promote the progress of science. The Knowledge Base has now been released and is being hacked on by a variety of bioinformatic researchers. With continued advocacy, the Science Commons Material Transfer Agreement that supplements the UBMTA (university-to-university licensing) with a standard university-to-industry license also is gaining traction.

Technology. The CC tech staff work on three layers. The bottom layer involves keeping the web site operational and up-to-date. The middle layer involves working with new companies that want to incorporate the CC licensing engine into their interface or to otherwise offer a CC licensing option to their users. Our tech staff often have to work with them to ensure that they understand the machine-readable layer of the licenses and how that might be used. One of the best results of this kind of consultation is the Flickr search tool. http://www.flickr.com/creativecommons/. Picasa now also enables CC licensing. The top layer involves standards work and other high-level technology discussions involving the future of the entire web. This year, after more than a year of patient advocacy, CC tech staff were instrumental in getting the W3C to bless RDFa, a protocol that allows the regular web and the semantic web to interoperate. CC licenses were the use case for this standard. Similarly, the Science Commons scientists played an essential role in successfully advocating for a number of open bioinformatics standards recommended by the W3C. This is hard, essential work, that is hard to fund but will have a lasting effect that favors openness on the web.

I recognize that this is a tough year for everyone, of course — CC is no exception — so your donation would be particularly welcome. (As you can see, we have inaugurated a new project called the CC network; the details are on that page. Your donation entitles you to membership.) Basically you pick the amount you want to donate and click “Join” under that number — or just put in a number of your own! All donations gratefully accepted. And depending on the amount, the donation brings all kinds of cool things, including an Open ID, your own CC network site, a jump drive full of Jonathan Coulton music, a signed Lessig book, a cool CC laptop sleeve and so on.

Thanks so much for this — and please feel free to pass this e-mail on to others who might like to support CC.

Warm regards,

Mike


 December 22, 2008 at 4:53 pm   Posted in: Intellectual Property   Print This Post Print This Post

Leave a Reply

Spam protection by WP Captcha-Free


  • « Previous post
  • Next post »

Authors

Daniel J. Solove
Kaimipono Wenger
Dave Hoffman
Frank Pasquale
Deven Desai
Danielle Citron
Lawrence Cunningham
Sarah Waldeck
Jaya Ramji-Nogales
Solangel Maldonado
Gerard Magliocca

Guests

Derek Bambauer
Gabriella Coleman
andré douglas pond cummings
David Gray
Brishen Rogers
Joseph Turow
Elizabeth A. Wilson













Previous Guests

Michael Abramowicz
Michelle Adams
Robert Ahdieh
Marvin Ammori
Michelle Anderson
Laura Appleman
Taunya Lovell Banks
Ann Bartow
Steven Bellovin
Adam Benforado
Gaia Bernstein
Francesca Bignami
Josh Blackman
Joseph Blocher
Jeremy Blumenthal
Kathleen Boozang
Bruce Boyden
Donald Braman
Al Brophy
Neil H. Buchanan
Bill Burke-White
Scott Burris
Paul Butler
Ryan Calo
Naomi Cahn
Anupam Chander
Miriam Cherry
Jack Chin
Glenn Cohen
Jennifer Collins
Caroline Mala Corbin
Thomas Crocker
Allison Danner
Brannon Denning
Deven Desai
Mike Dimino
Mark Edwards
Maxine Eichner
Jessica Erickson
David Fagundes
Lisa Fairfax
Joshua Fairfield
Christine Haight Farley
Kim Ferzan
Dan Filler
Mary Anne Franks
Michael Froomkin
Amanda Frost
Brian Frye
Timothy Glynn
Rachel Godsil
Eric Goldman
Kyle Graham
David Gray
Craig Green
Tristin Green
Jonathan Hafetz
Meredith Harbach
Michelle Harner
Jeffrey Harrison
Hosea Harvey
Erica Hashimoto
Jennifer Hendricks
Carissa Hessick
Laura Heymann
Robert Hillman
Gilbert A. Holmes
Nicole Huberfeld
Christine Hurt
Darian Ibrahim
Sherrilyn Ifill
John Ip
Shavar Jeffries
Kevin Johnson
Kristin Johnson
Jeff Jonas
Courtney Joslin
Dan Kahan
Jeffrey Kahn
Brian Kalt
Sam Kamin
Michael Kang
Chimène Keitner
Alicia Kelly
Orin Kerr
Nancy Kim
Heidi Kitrosser
Adam Kolber
Russell Korobkin
Alex Kreit
Anita S. Krishnakumar
Susan Kuo
Greg Lastowka
Sarah Lawsky
Youngjae Lee
Margaret Lewis
Erik Lillquist
Jeff Lipshaw
Jonathan Lipson
Jacqueline Lipton
Matthew Lister
Joseph Liu
Michael Madison
Kevin Noble Maillard
Solangel Maldonado
Jason Mazzone
Linda McClain
William McGeveran
Salil Mehra
Carrie Menkel-Meadow
Max Minzner
Viva Moffat
Scott Moss
Eric Muller
Jaya Ramji-Nogales
Helen Norton
Elizabeth Nowicki
Paul Ohm
Angela Onwuachi-Willing
Michael O'Shea
David Opderback
Kristen Osenga
Rafael Pardo
Marcy Peek
Eduardo Peñalver
Robert Percival
Michael J. Pitts
Marc Poirier
David Post
Amanda Pustilnik
Shruti Rana
Geoffrey Rapp
Neil Richards
Lori Ringhand
Alice Ristroph
Marc Roark
Sasha Romanosky
Tuan Samahon
Susan Scafidi
David Schraub
Paul Secunda
Jonathan Siegel
Jessica Silbey
Peter Smith
Judd Sneirson
Adam Steinman
Charles Sullivan
Rick Swedloff
Olivier Sylvain
Steph Tai
Andrew Taslitz
Robert Tsai
Jenia Turner
Steve Vladeck
Ari Waldman
Spencer Weber Waller
Howard Wasserman
Melissa Waters
Frank Wu
Alfred Yen
Corey Yung
David Zaring
Timothy Zick
Michael Zimmer
Jonathan Zittrain

Ownership

Concurring Opinions is a
general-interest legal blog
operated by Concurring
Opinions LLC, a Pennsylvania
Limited Liability Corporation.

Blogroll

Above the Law
Access to Justice
ACS Blog
Althouse
Balkinization
Becker-Posner Blog
BlackProf
BoingBoing
Chicago Law Faculty Blog
Conglomerate
CrimLaw
Crime & Federalism
CrimProf Blog
Crooked Timber
Derechoalderecho
Discourse.net
Dorf on Law
Election Law
Emergent Chaos
The Faculty Lounge
Feminist Law Profs
43(B)log
Freakonomics Blog
Freedom to Tinker
Google Blogoscoped
How Appealing
Ideoblog
Info/Law
Instapundit.com
Juris Novus
Jurisdynamics
Just Books
Law and Humanities Blog
Law and Letters
Law Librarian Blog
Legal Profession Blog
Legal Theory Blog
Legal Times Blog
Leiter Reports
Brian Leiter's Law School Reports
Lessig Blog
Madisonian Theory
Media Law Blog
Mirror of Justice
The Moderate Voice
National Security Advisors
Opinio Juris
Point of Law
PrawfsBlawg
ProfessorBainbridge.com
Property Prof Blog
Red Tape Chronicles
The Right Coast
Schneier on Security
SCOTUSBlog
Security Dilemmas
Sentencing Law and Policy
Simple Justice
Sivacracy.net
The Situationist
Susan Crawford
TalkLeft
Talking Points Memo
TaxProf Blog
TeachPrivacy Blog
Tech & Marketing Law
Truth on the Market
Volokh Conspiracy
WorkPlace Prof Blog
WSJ Law Blog
Wonkette
The Yin Blog


© Concurring Opinions

Powered by WordPress