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CC Open Culture: 2024 Year in Review

Open Culture, Open Heritage

2024 was quite a year for the Creative Commons (CC) Open Culture Program, thanks to generous funding from Arcadia, a charitable fund of Lisbet Rausing & Peter Baldwin. In this blog post we look back on some of the year’s key achievements. 

Interesting Story by Laura Muntz Lyall. Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons.

With new publications, events, and the launch of a new coalition, the CC Open Culture Program accomplished a lot! Here are some highlights:

  1. At the Open Culture Strategic Workshop in Lisbon, Portugal, we gathered nearly 50 experts from every continent to co-create a strategic roadmap for future action, charting a course for UNESCO Member States to draft an agreement (otherwise referred to as a legal instrument). This would promote open solutions to enable equitable access to cultural heritage worldwide. Read our blog post and full report for more: CC strategic workshop reveals big opportunities for open access to cultural heritage.  
  2. In the wake of the Lisbon workshop, we launched the Towards a Recommendation on Open Cultural Heritage( TAROCH) Coalition, a collaborative effort to achieve the adoption of a UNESCO standard-setting instrument to improve open access to cultural heritage. Read our blog post Creative Commons Launches TAROCH Coalition for Open Access to Cultural Heritage and TAROCH information brief and apply to join the Coalition now! 
  3. We published Don’t be a Dinosaur; or, The Benefits of Open Culture, which distills the views expressed in our Open Culture Voices (OCV) series about the ways in which so many people can benefit from open culture. Read more in this blog post: What are the Benefits of Open Culture? A new CC Publication.
  4. We released guidelines for open culture that offer a fresh and innovative approach to prompting users to reference the institution when using public domain materials: Nudging Users to Reference Institutions when Using Public Domain Materials. Read more on our blog: Where in the world is… this public domain material? Helping users refer to host institutions.
  5. We published Open Culture Capsules, a video series that addresses some of the most frequently asked questions about our work in the Open Culture Program. Our blog has more details and links to all the episodes: Top Questions about Open Culture Answered in Five Short Videos.  

In addition, we published even more blog posts on a wide range of topics (check out this one for example: Moving Institutions Toward Open—Building on 6 Years of the Open GLAM Survey). We also organized training activities (watch this webinar we organized with Connecticut Humanities: Open Access Made Easy: How to Open Your Collections for Greater and Better Sharing) and offered the CC Certificate on Open Culture. We collaborated with Europeana to review their Public Domain Charter

We took the stage at several events to promote open culture, such as:

We also supported our community through the OC platform and its working groups and community-led activities

The Open Culture team is thrilled that we will once again be offering the CC Certificate on Open Culture in 2025. Learn more and register! We look forward to building on those achievements and continuing to ensure we can all access heritage to connect to our past and imagine our futures. Contact us at info@creativecommons.org for more information.

Posted 13 December 2024

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