Linked Heritage - Legal Interoperability

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Legal interoperability making open (government) data compatible with businesses and communities Global Interoperability and Linked Data in Libraries Aula Magna dell'Univeristà di Firenze June 18-19, 2012 [email protected] Nexa Center for Internet & Society, Politecnico di Torino – DAUIN () LAPSI - The European Thematic Network on Legal Aspects of PSI (http://www.lapsi-project.eu/) these slides available under a CC0 license/waiver http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

Transcript of Linked Heritage - Legal Interoperability

Page 1: Linked Heritage - Legal Interoperability

Legal interoperabilitymaking open (government) data

compatible with businesses and communities

Global Interoperability and Linked Data in LibrariesAula Magna dell'Univeristà di Firenze

June 18-19, 2012

[email protected]

Nexa Center for Internet & Society, Politecnico di Torino – DAUIN ()LAPSI - The European Thematic Network on Legal Aspects of PSI (http://www.lapsi-project.eu/)

these slides available under a CC0 license/waiver http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

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legal interoperability

possibility of (legally) mixing data coming from different sources (e.g. government data, UGC,

corporate data)

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agenda

1) © law → open data need “licenses”

2) (hence) legal interoperability (is an issue)

3) focus on various licenses

4) implications

1) (for license stewards)

2) for license users

5) conclusion

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the legal background

“copyright” default rule = all rights reserved(“copyright” in a broad sense: ≈ droit d'auteur &

including sui generis database right, etc.)

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the legal background

“copyright” default rule = all rights reserved(“copyright” in a broad sense: ≈ droit d'auteur &

including sui generis database right, etc.)

(without a clear statement → locked data or legal uncertainty)

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the legal background

“copyright” default rule = all rights reserved(“copyright” in a broad sense: ≈ droit d'auteur &

including sui generis database right, etc.)

(without a clear statement → locked data or legal uncertainty)

open data → open “license”(including dedications, waivers or notices

e.g. CC0 or the PublicDomainMark)

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so, to avoid prohibitive transaction costs,we have to deal with “copyright” licenses

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so, to avoid prohibitive transaction costs,we have to deal with “copyright” licenses

a common problem without a general solution→ many different licensing tools

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(data) licensing landscape

● (FLOSS licenses used for data)

● Creative Commons Licenses● standard general purpose CC licenses

– BY; (SA); [NC]; {ND}

– 3.0 EU licenses (waiving sui generis database right)

● CC0 waiver (with fallback clauses → broad license)

● Public Domain Mark (notice of PD status)

● Open Data Commons Licenses● for (open) data only

– PD dedication (with license fallback), BY or SA (first to be produced, targeting communities)

● National (open government) data licenses● UK: OGL (BY +)

● FR: License Ouverte (BY +)

● IT: IODL (beta ver.: BY-SA-NC +; 1.0: BY-SA +; 2.0: BY +)

● ...

used by/ developed with Europeana

{

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the “+”s: national licenses &standard worries

● UK OGL, Italian Open Data License (IODL), etc. ● ensure [or “take all reasonable steps so”] that you

do not use the Information in a way that suggests any official status...

● ensure that you do not mislead others or misrepresent the Information or its source...

● ensure that your use of the Information does not breach the Data Protection Act...

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License Ouverte &privacy concerns

● the French LO adopts an interesting solution about several “standard worries”

● section “About the Open Licence” at the end of the document● description of relevant “facts” (instead of clauses)

– Information which contains personal data is not considered to be public sector information re-usable under the terms of French Law – except where persons on which data is collected have agreed to its reuse, where this data has been rendered anonymous by the public sector bodies, or where a legal or statutory provision permits its re-use (in these three cases, re-use is subject to compliance with French privacy protection legislation).

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Non-Commercial reminder

● (luckily) this is an “endangered clause” in the PSI domain

● yet, the NC debate characterizes the first phases of most “re-use friendly” initiatives

● de facto, the NC licenses are only compatible with other NC licenses

● always remind (to your institution) some basic things

● Non-Commercial → no (standard) business models● NC also → no (open) communities

– impossible to re-use for non-profit groups including Wikimedia/Wikipedia, OpenStreetMap, etc.

● oversimplifying: Non-Commercial → NO Wikipedia (DBpedia)

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various approachesto interoperability

● OGL FAQs● information can be mixed and re-purposed easily with

other licence models requiring attribution in that the terms of the Open Government Licence should not present any barriers

● LO● interoperability clause in the main text

● IODL● 1.0 (SA): interoperability clause in the main text● 2.0 (BY): OGL-like solution (FAQs)

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a view onlicense interoperability complexity

● preliminary attempt● given the original license

– on the lines

● can I use a given standard license for a “derivative” work/DB?– on the columns

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zooming onlicense interoperability complexity

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universal donors

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universal donors

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universal donors

● Creative Commons Zero (CC0)● Public Domain Dedication or License (PDDL)● tagging of public domain content with the PDMark

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the problem

● you may have different interpretations● several issues have been oversimplified

– including the licensed rights!● copyright vs. sui generis● database vs. content (“data”)

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the problem

● you may have different interpretations● several issues have been oversimplified

– including the licensed rights!● copyright vs. sui generis● database vs. content (“data”)

this is the best proof of existence of aserious problem!

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it's not just a matter of theoretical compatibility

it doesn't matter if some legal scholars could argue that mixing data may be possible

re-users need to clearly understandwhat they can (or cannot) do

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some implicationsfor license stewards

● beware of license vanity

● work to merge share-alike licenses (or make them compatible)

● don't create new ones!

● you may facilitate (©)interoperability if you address non-© worries with other tools

● standard © licenses do not cover non-© aspects (e.g. privacy)– notices satisfying any taste (e.g. privacy notices)

– soft law could substitute some stupid disclaimers

● if you advise a (public sector) information holder

● don't produce a custom license, but a custom licensing framework– using standard © license (e.g. New Zealand: NZGOAL framework)

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some implicationsfor license users

● Public Domain (CC0) → actual interoperability● CC BY → reasonable attribution

→ decent interoperability

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some implicationsfor license users

● Public Domain (CC0) → actual interoperability● CC BY → reasonable attribution

→ decent interoperability● Share-Alike licenses

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some implicationsfor license users

● Public Domain (CC0) → actual interoperability● CC BY → reasonable attribution

→ decent interoperability● Share-Alike licenses

problems uncertainty

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some implicationsfor license users

● Public Domain (CC0) → actual interoperability● CC BY → reasonable attribution

→ decent interoperability● Share-Alike licenses

problems uncertainty

lawyers

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some implicationsfor license users

● Public Domain (CC0) → actual interoperability● CC BY → reasonable attribution

→ decent interoperability● Share-Alike licenses

problems uncertainty

lawyers;-)

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conclusion (hope)

● it's a learning process● e.g. FLOSS

– ¼ Century to achive (decent) interoperability

– Mike Linksvayer (CC):● FLOSS: discovery concerning what works for field - Early confusion on libre vs gratis -

Early non-commercial licenses, including first release of Linux kernel● Now, people who put first freedom (e.g., Stallman), development (e.g., Torvalds), and

profit (corporations) ~ agree on what free/open means

– Amazing!

● in the mid/long run● legal interoperability could be achieved thorough the evolution of legal

frameworks in order to harmonize the landscape of Government Data

● in the short term● you have to adopt a copyright “license”

● Creative Commons Zero (CC0) or similar “public domain” tools are the easiest and more complete “solution” to license interoperability