Our goal:“Universal access to research and education, full participation in culture.”
More free More restrictive
1
1. Free Licences
2. Projects
First point:It’s becoming much easier to
access New Zealand’s cultural heritage
Second point:The technical barriers to access
and reuse are dropping
Third point:This means you can't predict who
will do exciting things with your work
Media Text Hack
CC Kiwi
MIT Reader Stories
“I am in-between post-docs and I am having difficulty obtaining journal access” –Post-doc, US
“I don’t have access to many articles due to … sanctions. … I really appreciate this policy of MIT that helped me a lot.” – Researcher, Middle East
“For a small, publicly funded …media like the one I direct…academic knowledge… can be quite time-consuming and often very expensive.”
Fourth point:Obvious potential to disseminate
heritage items for reuse
Getty Museum Closed:121 Purchases p/m Open: 60,000 downloads p/m
Claude-Joseph Vernet (French, 1714 - 1789)A Calm at a Mediterranean Port, 1770, The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles
Fifth point:The legal barriers to dissemination
& reuse remain.
Copyright Graffiti Sign by Horia Varlan CC-BY
https://flic.kr/p/7vBD4TCopyright
Copyright is very restrictive. Automatic.Applies online.No 'c' required.Lasts for 50 years after death.
Heald, Paul J., How Copyright Makes Books and Music Disappear (and How Secondary Liability Rules Help Resurrect Old Songs) (July 5, 2013). Illinois Program in Law, Behavior and Social Science Paper No. LBSS14-07; Illinois Public Law Research Paper No. 13-54. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2290181 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2290181
Sixth point:Usage rights statements are often
vague, overly restrictive & not standardised across the sector
Seventh point:Many heritage institutions feel
tension between kaitiaki and reuse
“Grayson, Westley, Stanislaus County...” via US Nat. ArchivesNo Known Copyright
https://flic.kr/p/8UAPVT What to Do?.
Start from the other direction
First:Clearly mark out-of-copyright
works as such.
Second:Use Creative Commons licensing
for works with CC-friendly donors
Add Creative Commons option to donor/deposit agreements.
Third:Works for which institution holds
copyright: use CC licensing
Wait. What is Creative Commons, anyway?
Here's the pitch:Creative Commons licences are clear, simple, free, legally robust and let you keep your copyright.
Public DomainFew Restrictions
Public DomainFew Restrictions
All Rights ReservedFew Freedoms
Public DomainFew Restrictions
All Rights ReservedFew Freedoms
Some Rights ReservedRange of Licence Options
Four Licence Elements
Attribution
Non Commercial
No Derivatives
Share Alike
Six Licences
More free More restrictive
Layers
Licence symboll
Human readable
Lawyer readable
Go to creativecommons.org/choose
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1cIWmV5nCF8o97Nrb8wYZWfQ97FG-4ylNuXezh2nlBBM/edit
Man from the city, 1971, by Jan Nigro. Purchased 1971. Te Papa (1971-0036-2)
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 3.0 New Zealand licenceTe Papa
Massed troops at a New Zealand Division thanksgiving service, World War I. Ref: 1/2-013806-G. No known copyright.
http://natlib.govt.nz/records/22684353NLNZ; WW100
resources.creativecommons.org.nzcreativecommons.org.nznzcommons.org.nz@[email protected]@creativecommons.org.nzgroups.creativecommons.org.nz(we're also on Loomio)
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
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