Creative Commons

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Creative Commons (CC) allows its users to utilize the Internets full capabilities of sharing information with others and allowing that information to advance others work. According to CreativeCommons website, creative commons is a non-profit organization headquartered in Mountain View, California whose aim is to realize the full potential of the internet and drive a new era of development, growth, and productivity. Essentially Creative commons builds upon the already existing copyright protection which is applied to any kind of work immediately after it is conceptualized. Creative commons creates a free, public and standardized infrastructure that creates a balance between the reality of the internet and the reality of copyright laws. Creative Commons provides an infrastructure which consists of a set of copyright licenses and tools that create a balance inside the traditional “all rights reserved” setting that copyright law creates. This done using a simple standardized way so artist can choose what level copyright protection they desire. This ability plays a large roll on the internet because information can be easily and now legally, copied, distributed, edited and built upon.

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Creative Commons logo

History

Creative Commons was founded in 2001 after receiving funding from the Center for the Public Domain [1]. In 2003 they had distributed 1 million licenses and as of 2009 that had licensed 350 million works and created their 3.0 version. [1]. Creative commons is intended to foster an infrastructure that supports creativity, sharing, and innovation by legally protecting materials that the original creators allowed presence in the public domain.

Name

Creative Commons is a common place for its users' information. The term commons is used because that is what the company set out to create; a common place where professional works can be accessed, and as there website says " copied, distributed, edited, remixed, and built upon".

Legal

Ethical Issues

The most common criticism of the creative commons license is that the creativity of individuals can be exploited by others without investing as much time in creating original content. This idea lumps those using the creative commons license into the mindset of rehashing old work without contributing anything novel.

Because of the low amount of official administration under creative commons, many people can abuse works under its license by claiming others' work to be their own. Smaller groups of content production like bloggers or small news publications can be greatly affected by others taking their work under the Creative Commons license and reusing it.

License Types

The Three Layer Concept

Creative Commons licenses are written in three "layers". This is done to make CC even easier to use. The first layer happens to be the legaleze that actually dictates the legal aspects of the license. Legal writing is often difficult and hard to read for most of the people that use Creative Commons so the company provides the second layer which is called the Commons Deed but is often referred to as the Human Readable version. This layer provides an easy way for the every day non-lawyer to understand what exactly the license allows for and covers. The third and final layer is the "machine readable" version. This allows for software and search engines to know what is available under a CC license.

Creative Commons offers six licenses for use and all of the licenses require attribution when using the work but don’t limit users ability to copy and distribute it.

Attribution license(abbreviated to 'BY')

Is any material where it is sufficient enough to just give due credit to the author.

Attribution Share Alike (abbreviated to ‘BY-SA’)

Is the attribution which allows material to be adapted as long as the adapted work is licensed under the same terms as the original work. It is similar to open source software licences.

Attribution No Derivatives (abbreviated to ‘BY-ND’)

Is the attribution which dictates the original material cannot be changed or adapted in any way

Attribution Non-commercial (abbreviated to ‘BY-NC’)

Is the attribution which dictates that the original work cannot be used for commercial purposes.

Attribution Non-commercial Share alike (‘BY-NC-SA’)

Is similar to BY-SA but with restriction that further uses can only be non-commercial

Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives (‘bc-nc-nd’)

Similar to BY-NC but original material cannot be changed or adapted in any way.

Licence Attribution Chart

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 History http://creativecommons.org/about/history accessed November 28 2011.
<a rel="cc:attributionURL" property="cc:attributionName" href="http://creativecommons.org">Creative Commons</a> / <a rel="license" href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/">CC BY 3.0</a>