FC: "Creative Commons" copyright project debuts today

From: Declan McCullagh (declanat_private)
Date: Thu May 16 2002 - 20:38:23 PDT

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    From: Donna Wentworth <donnaat_private>
    To: "'declanat_private'" <declanat_private>
    Subject: CC Debuts
    Date: Thu, 16 May 2002 11:40:25 -0400
    
    Hi Declan,
    
    You may be inundated with email regarding the Creative Commons launch today
    at O'Reilly, but I thought I'd send the below along, anyway, just in case.
    
    The Berkman Center held the inaugural meeting of the Creative Commons on May
    7, last year; people interested in the project are welcome to take a peek at
    the meeting archive: <http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/creativecommons/>.
    
    Regards,
    Donna
    
    **********************
    May 16, 2002
    SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA -
    
    Representatives from the new nonprofit Creative
    Commons (http://creativecommons.org) today outlined
    the company's plans to help lower the legal barriers
    to creativity through an innovative coupling of law
    and technology. The Creative Commons will provide a
    free set of tools to enable creators to share aspects
    of their copyrighted works with the public. "Our tools
    will make it easier for artists and authors to make some
    or all of their rights available to the public for
    free," Stanford Professor and Creative Commons
    Chairman Lawrence Lessig explained at the O'Reilly Emerging
    Technologies Conference. "If, for example, an artist
    wants to make her music available for non-commercial use,
    or with just attribution, our tools will help her
    express those intentions in a 'machine-readable' form.
    Computers will then be able to identify and understand
    the terms of an author's license, making it easier
    for people to search for and share creative works."
    
    Creative Commons was formed by a coalition of
    academics from a broad range of institutions, including
    Duke, Harvard, MIT, Stanford, and Villanova. Its aim is
    to use the flexibility of copyright law to help support
    a rich public domain alongside traditional copyrights.
    
    In a separate Creative Commons presentation, Molly Van
    Houweling, Executive Director, and Lisa Rein, Technical
    Architect, previewed the web-based application that will
    help scholars, artists, and others make their works
    available for copying, modification, and redistribution.
    Authors and artists who use the tool may choose to dedicate
    their works to the public domain or choose to retain their
    copyright while allowing creative reuses subject to custom
    combinations of conditions. An illustrator seeking exposure,
    for example, might choose to let anyone freely copy and
    distribute her work, provided that they give her proper
    credit. An academic eager to build a public audience could
    permit unlimited noncommercial copying of his writings.
    
    "The aim," Ms. Van Houweling explained, "is not only to
    increase the sum of raw source material online, but also
    to make access to that material cheaper and easier." To
    do this, Creative Commons will translate authors' intentions
    into "metadata" associated with their creative works. This
    will enable people to use the Internet to find, for example,
    photographs that are free to be altered or reused, or texts
    that may be copied, distributed, or sampled with no
    restrictions whatsoever - all by their authors' permission,
    expressed in code as well as plain, straightforward
    language.
    
    Creative Commons expects to launch these applications for
    general public use this fall. In the meantime, Creative
    Commons is inviting feedback on its prototype and its
    mission.
    
    Creative Commons also announced its longer-term plans to
    create an intellectual property conservancy. Like a land
    trust or nature preserve, the conservancy will protect works
    of special public value from exclusionary private ownership
    and from obsolescence due to neglect or technological change.
    The conservancy will house a rich repository of high-quality
    works in a variety of media, and help foster an ethos of
    sharing, public education, and creative interactivity.
    
    More about Creative Commons:
    
    Creative Commons was founded upon the idea that creativity
    and innovation rely on a rich heritage of prior
    intellectual endeavor. We stand on the shoulders of giants
    by revisiting, reusing, and transforming the ideas and works
    of our peers and predecessors. Digital communications promise
    a new explosion of this kind of collaborative creative activity.
    At the same time, expanding intellectual property protection
    leaves fewer and fewer creative works in the "public domain" -
    the body of creative material unfettered by law and, to
    quote Justice Brandeis, "free as the air to common use" - while
    the growing complexity of copyright makes it more and more
    difficult to know when it is legal to copy or alter a work.
    Creative Commons will work within the copyright system to
    help reduce these barriers to creativity.
    
    Creative Commons was founded in 2001 with the generous support
    of the Center for the Public Domain.  It is now based at and
    receives generous support from Stanford Law School, where
    Creative Commons shares space, staff, and inspiration with
    the Stanford Law School Center for Internet and Society.  It
    is led by a Board of Directors that includes law professors
    Lawrence Lessig, James Boyle, and Michael Carroll, MIT
    computer science professor Hal Abelson, lawyer-turned-documentary
    filmmaker-turned-cyberlaw expert Eric Saltzman, and public
    domain web publisher Eric Eldred. The organization is also
    advised by a technical advisory board that includes boardmember
    Hal Abelson, Barbara Fox (Senior Architect, Cryptography and
    Digital Rights Management, Microsoft WebTV), Don McGovern
    (Senior Fellow at the Berkman Center for Internet & Society
    at Harvard Law School), and Eric Miller (Activity Lead for
    the World Wide Web Consortium's Semantic Web Initiative).
    
    Please direct press inquiries to Molly Van Houweling, Executive
    Director, or Glenn Otis Brown, Assistant Director, at
    pressat_private
    
    **********************
    
    ..........
    Donna Wentworth
    Editor
    The Filter <http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/filter>
    Berkman Center for Internet & Society
    Harvard Law School
    Phone: (617) 495-0662
    Fax:   (617) 495-7641
    filter-editorat_private
    donnaat_private
      
    
    
    
    
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