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Red Hat challenges you to support Creative Commons
by mike UncategorizedRed Hat, a company with considerable claim to being the open source leader, has generously agreed to participate in the Creative Commons fundraising campaign with a Sponsor Challenge Match. Contribute now and double the impact of your gift to Creative Commons!
Job Opening – Science Commons Counsel
by mia UncategorizedCreative Commons’ Science Commons project is looking for legal counsel to run its licensing work. Details are here.
CC in Review: Lawrence Lessig on CC Licenses
by Lawrence Lessig Copyright[This email is part of a weekly series written by Lawrence Lessig and others about the history and future of Creative Commons. If you would like to be removed from this list, please click here: https://creativecommons.org/about/lessigletter#unsubscribe Alternatively, if you know others who might find these interesting, please recommend they sign up at https://creativecommons.org/about/lessigletter ] From…
If only sharing were really simple…
by mike UncategorizedMicrosoft CTO Ray Ozzie writes that Microsoft has released another RSS extension specification under CC: One other important point: We’re releasing the SSE specification under a Creative Commons license – Attribution-ShareAlike. I’m very pleased that Microsoft is supporting the Creative Commons approach; you can see more about this at in the licensing section at the…
Music 100 years ago, today
by mike UncategorizedThe Cylinder Presservation and Digitization Project has placed online amazing collection of over 5000 recordings from the late 1800s and early 1900s. Unrestored digitizations available as large .wav files are in the public domain, while restored mp3s are licensed under Attribution-NonCommercial, as described in the project’s note on copyright. Browse the collection. Listen to a…
Discussion Draft – Proposed License Amendment to Avoid Content Ghettos in the Commons
by mia UncategorizedFor those of us dedicated to creating, expanding and enabling a commons of creativity and knowledge (expressed in a variety of formats), the issue of license interoperability is an important one. Already there has been valuable commentary about the interoperability between content licensed under different types of Creative Commons licenses — specifically, those that permit…
CC in Review: Lawrence Lessig on iCommons
by Lawrence Lessig Copyright[This is part of a weekly series written by Lawrence Lessig and others about the history and future of Creative Commons. If you know others who might find these interesting, please recommend they sign up at https://creativecommons.org/about/lessigletter] Two weeks ago, I described our first efforts to build CC internationally. That was the beginning of the…
Building Web 2.0
by mike UncategorizedIt is my duty as a member of the Xtech 2006 program committee to inform you of the call for participation. The theme of the conference, to be held May 16-19 in Amsterdam, is “Building Web 2.0.” Whatever you think of the Web 2.0 name, it is clear that Creative Commons is highly relevant, as…
New Featured Commoner – Ottmar Liebert
by mia UncategorizedOttmar Liebert is our new Featured Commoner. Ottmar composes, performs and records music in a Nouveau Flamenco style. Seven of his albums have gone platinum and two other albums gold; he has also been nominated for a Grammy. He uses the Creative Commons Sampling Plus license to make large amounts of his music available to…
Ottmar Liebert
by mia Open CulturePhoto © Greg Gorman / Santa Fe Ottmar Liebert composes, performs and records music in a Nouveau Flamenco style, which mixes elements of flamenco with jazz, bossa nova, and other genres. Seven of his albums have gone platinum and two other albums gold; he has also been nominated for a Grammy. At Ottmar’s and the…