Creative Commons Licensing

Online authors - which is anyone who works online - are concerned about how to protect and how to share the products of their work. On one hand, writing a blog (or posting one's print-work on a blog) or working on a wiki gets the work Out There. On the other hand, digital reproduction makes it easy to grab, sample, adapt, and alter the work. And on the third hand, IP creators are concerned about how to handle the collaborative efforts: mashups, adaptations, embedding images and videos and music in a page, or creating the collective document that is a wiki.
IP = intellectual property, sometimes called "original" work. Poem, novel, musical score, scholarly article or book, photo, drawing, software application are all IP. So are notes on a classroom blackboard, a chalk drawing on a building wall, and a shopping list. When published to the web, a work is automatically copyrighted, just as it is in any other form of publication. Unless the creator allows rights, work's use is governed by copyright laws (all rights reserved) unless the creator explicitly changes those rights. Issues surrounding IP are complex and deserve a page on this wiki.

Things have changed. Getting work published no longer means simply "putting a work out to be read." Work on the Internet isn't just read, it's commented on, shared further, tagged, linked, incorporated, mashed up, adapted, reworked, republished, collaged ... Issues surround these uses include where the boundaries are, what makes for fair use on the Internet, when a work ceases to be original, when a work becomes original by being reworked... and how to carry IP rights from one iteration to the next.

The common sense of the matter is that traditional copyright isn't up to the features and speed of the new medium, so we change copyright to suit. We make it possible for IP creators to specify what rights they want to protect and what's permissible.

Here are some starting points


New Methods of Production and Distibution


Three Frees
Net people and sharers define two three aspects of free
  • free as in beer: free content or code
  • free as in speech: speak. but the speaker owns the words
  • free as in puppy - Free for the taking, but you have to take care of it.

Free content

Free as in beer.

Free New Media Content

Need a list linked to digital poem and other works that can only be "read" online or on a computer screen: hypertexts, dataminers, ...

Open Source

Free as in beer - and free as in speech.

MashUps and adaptations of works, tagging


Gorillaz mashups

Music Mashups


Data Mashups

The Commons


Questions for discussion concerning IP

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