CSC 379:Week 2, Group 1
Creative Commons
Overview
Provisions of Creative Commons License
Based upon copyright protections, the various forms of the creative commons licenses allow the creator of a work to declare "some rights reserved" instead of the usual "all rights reserved" associated with plain copyright. This allows the creator of the original work to grant certain permissions to those who wish to use the original work without the prospective user having to explicitly ask for permission.
There are 4 conditions that make up the different Creative Commons licenses:
- Attribution
- All Creative Commons licenses require attribution as specified by the original work's creator when the work is used, distributed, or modified whether in its original form or as a derivative work.
- Noncommercial
- The original work may only be used, distributed, or modified only for noncommercial purposes whether the work is in its original form or as a derivative work.
- No derivative works
- The original work may be used or distributed, but may not be used in any form of derivative work.
- Share alike
- Derivative works based upon the original work may only be distributed under an identical license to the original work.
These conditions are combined in various forms to make the six main Creative Commons licenses:
- Attribution (by)
- Attribution Non-commerical (by-nc)
- Attribution Non-commercial Share Alike (by-nc-sa)
- Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives (by-nc-nd)
- Attribution No Derivatives (by-nd)
- Attribution Share Alike (by-sa)
Links
Comparison to other common licenses
License | Advantages | Disadvantages | Ethical Considerations |
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Creative Commons |
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Copyright |
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GPL |
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Lesser GPL (LGPL) |
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BSD-style Licenses |
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Public Domain |
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Discussion Questions
Adoption of license
- The Question
- Should groups like media outlets who desire their content to be shared adopt licenses like creative commons to clarify and guarantee the protections they want to extend to the public?
Creative Commons licenses are good way for people to clarify what should and should not be done with their work. It lets you pick and choose what rights to reserve. CC licensing must also be indicated, whereas copyright requires no notification. A CC license is a good way to distrubute the works you have created and protect the people who download it. If you did not create the work though, you of course cannot give others the right to use it as they see fit. So unless the media outlet is all the creator of all the media they distrubute, a CC won't help protect the public.
Links
Ethical considerations / Obstacles to adoption
- The Question
- What ethical advantages and disadvantages are there for adopting Creative Commons licenses? What obstacles exist towards the adoption of Creative Commons licenses within the business community?
With a Creative Commons license you can allow people to share in your creative work and add to or change things while at the same time reserving which rights you want without giving the public complete free reign over your work. This gives creators more options than normal copyright. This benifits the public but can also benifit the creator by giving them a way to get their work out to the public easier without giving up all their rights to their work.
A Creative Commons license does have some disadvantages though. Once you pick which license to use, you can't take it back. You can choose to stop licensing your work that way but anyone that already has a copy of your work under the old license can forever use it to the full extent that old license permits. Also the most restrictive Creative Commons licenses will still allow restrictive verbatim copying with attribution and non-commercial purposes. This is less than just copyright and may not be restrictive enough for widespread use within the business community. It seems Creative Commons licenses are targeted more towards giving the public greater use and currently don't suite everyone's needs.
Links
Ethical considerations of international usage
- The Question
- Copyright law differs between countries. Creative Commons has licenses that can be adapted to be compatible with the laws of many nations. What ethical considerations are there to a system of international copyright laws and/or agreements? Are licenses like Creative Commons viable alternatives to international agreements?
nap: I think that CC is adapted for international use, but there are specific notes about this in the FAQ, I think. Maybe international agreements provide a basis for CC, since it is based in copyright? I'm not sure about this one...