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Leaked European Commission Copyright Plans Ignore the Public Interest
by Timothy Vollmer CopyrightCreative Commons has been actively engaged in efforts to support copyright reforms aligned with the commons and the public interest, including the copyright reform consultations in the European Union. Via the Communia Association, CC Europe affiliates are at the center of this debate, providing education and advocacy for forward-thinking reforms to the copyright framework. We know the…
Free the Reviews: Why Free Culture Needs Free Opinions
by Erik Moeller UncategorizedThanks to the free culture movement, vast knowledge repositories like Wikipedia and StackExchange allow content to be re-used freely and built upon, and many major sites offer Creative Commons licensing as part of their user interfaces.
A politics of cooperation: Caroline Woolard on free culture, fine art, and everyday life
by Jennie Rose Halperin Open Access, Open CultureThe interdisciplinary artist Caroline Woolard engages with political economy and activism through radically innovative collaborative projects.
Open Access to Research Critical to Advance Progress Against Cancer
by Timothy Vollmer Copyright, Open Access, Open Data, Open ScienceThe National Cancer Moonshot Initiative seeks to make ten years of progress on cancer research in half that time, with a goal to end cancer in our lifetime. The project—led by U.S. Vice President Joe Biden—recently called for ideas to help shape the cancer research priorities for the Moonshot. They received over 1,600 comments and…
“This is my time and I’m recording it”: Carol Highsmith and the nature of giving
by Jennie Rose Halperin Open CulturePhotographer Carol Highsmith has donated her life’s work of tens of thousands of photos to the Library of Congress during her decades long career.
‘Reclaim Invention’ for the benefit of everyone
by Timothy Vollmer Copyright, Open AccessThe vision of the Creative Commons project is universal access to research and education, and full participation in culture to drive a new era of development, growth, and productivity. Collaboration, sharing, and co-operation are in our nature — building community, co-operating towards common goods, and creating shared benefits are at the heart of who we…
U.S. Moves Ahead with Limited Code Sharing Policy
by Timothy Vollmer CopyrightImage by Ilya Pavlov, CC0. Last week the White House finalized the Federal Source Code Policy to improve access to software code developed by or for the federal government. The policy is a step in the right direction toward making software accessible and reusable across U.S. government agencies, as well as for the general public.…
Exploring open textbooks to improve education in Uganda
by Vincent Kizza Open EducationIn March we hosted the second Institute for Open Leadership. In our summary of the event we mentioned that the Institute fellows would be taking turns to write about their open policy projects. As a Ugandan science educator with a background in computer science, I have witnessed thousands of kids dropping out of school because…
Show your support for Diego Gomez this week!
by Timothy Vollmer Copyright, Open AccessFinal arguments in the case against Diego Gomez will be presented on August 10. Gomez is a Colombian graduate student who shared an academic paper without permission online and received a criminal copyright complaint from the author. If convicted, Gomez faces a 4-8 year prison sentence and a significant monetary fine. Over the last year, we’ve highlighted…
The changing role of the publisher in the age of plenty
by Niall McNulty Open EducationIn March we hosted the second Institute for Open Leadership, and in our summary of the event we mentioned that the Institute fellows would be taking turns to write about their open policy projects. By way of some background, I am currently the digital publishing manager at the African branch of Cambridge University Press (CUP),…