Module 6: Creative Approaches and Alternatives: Difference between revisions

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By Melanie Dulong de Rosnay and William Fisher
==[[Image:key.png|50px|]] Learning objective ==


== Learning objective ==
Traditional rights management often involves an exclusive assignment of all of the rights associated with a copyright from the author to a publisher. The publisher then makes copies and distributes the work to the public for a fee.


Traditional rights management often involves an exclusive assignment of all the rights associated with a copyright from the author to a publisher. The publisher then makes copies and distributes the work to the public for a fee.  
By contrast, '''free''', '''libre''' and '''open access''' models disseminate works at no cost to the user. This module describes these alternative approaches, focusing on Creative Commons licensing and Open Access policy for scientific publications.


By contrast, '''free''', '''libre''' and '''open access''' models disseminate works at no cost for the user. This module describes these alternative approaches, focusing on Creative Commons licensing and Open Access policy for scientific publications.


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== Case study ==
== [[Image:casestudy.png|50px|]]Case study ==
Angela writes Nadia the following email:  “A professor at our university is the author of one of the articles I want to include in the course pack. However, when I contacted him to request his permission, he answered that he had already transferred all his rights to a publisher and thus wasn’t able to allow me to copy his work. How can it be possible that someone can’t even authorize use of his own work? What could be done to avoid this situation in the future?”


“A professor at our university is the author of one of the articles I want to include in the course pack. However, when I contacted him to request his permission, he answered that he had already transferred all his rights to a publisher and thus wasn’t able to allow me to copy his work. How can it be possible that someone can’t even authorize use of her own work? What could be done to avoid this situation in the future?”
How should Nadia respond?


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==[[Image:lesson.png|50px|]] Lesson ==
== Introduction: Physical and Digital Commons ==
== Introduction: Physical and Digital Commons ==


Physical objects are '''scarce''' or '''rivalrous.''' This means that there are a limited number and using one decreases the total amount that can be consumed. For example, if I buy a bicycle, there is one less bicycle that can be enjoyed by another.  
Physical objects are often '''scarce''' and '''rivalrous.''' This means that there are a limited number of such objects, and using one decreases the total amount that can be consumed. For example, an apple can be eaten by only one person, and when it is eaten, fewer apples are available to be consumed by other people.  


Digital resources, on the other hand, are '''nonrivalrous.''' This means they may be shared by unlimited numbers of people without decreasing in number. An idea is nonrivalrous: when I tell you something, I do not forget it, but you gain it also.  
By contrast, the intellectual products governed by copyright law typically are '''nonrivalrous'''.  A novel, for example, may be read and enjoyed by an unlimited number of people.


Copyright laws have historically been written to govern rivalrous goods. Some argue that the introduction of digital nonrivalrous goods means copyright law should change. Unlike the traditional “all rights reserved” approach, new licensing schemes have been developed to accompany the possibilities offered by the information age in terms of collaboration and creativity. This module will explain some of these alternative approaches.
Digital technology has sharply reduced the cost of making copies of embodiments of intellectual products and thus has highlighted the nonrivalrous character of those products.  If the novel (to continue our example) is in an electronic format, an unlimited number of copies of it can be made and distributed very cheaply.
 
The wide distribution of intellectual products is socially beneficial. If that widespread distribution can be accomplished very inexpensively, why doesn't the law permit it?  As we saw in [[Module_1:_Copyright_and_the_Public_Domain | Module 1]], the conventional answer is that prohibitions on copying are necessary to preserve incentives for novelists to write novels in the first instance.
 
In a growing number of contexts, reformers are challenging that answer.  Authors of some works -- or some kinds of works -- may not need all of the rights that copyright law gives them in order to remain motivated to produce creative works.  In such settings, copyright law may do more harm than good. To deal with situations of this sort, the reformers have developed various systems to facilitate more widespread use of creative works than the copyright system contemplates. This module describes those systems.


== Free Software Licenses ==
== Free Software Licenses ==


Most commercial software programs are distributed under restrictive terms of use. Moreover, their source code - the code which makes the program run - is '''closed''', or unavailable to developers. Developers cannot study them to understand how they work, to fix bugs or to customize them to their needs.
Most commercial software programs are distributed under restrictive terms of use. Moreover, their source code -- the code that makes the program run -- is '''closed.''' As a result, developers cannot study the code to understand how it works, to fix bugs, or to customize it to their needs.


A radically different approach to software was first developed by Richard Stallman, a researcher at MIT. Stallman became angry when he could not modify the software for a printer in his office that was not working properly.  Provoke by this and other experienced, Stallman created the GNU-GPL license, which allow the users to run, copy, distribute, study, change and improve the software to which it is applied specifically by granting users [http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html/ four kinds of freedoms]:
A radically different approach to software was first developed by Richard Stallman when he was a researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Stallman became angry when he could not modify the software for a printer in his office that was not working properly.  Provoked by this and other experiences, Stallman created the GNU-GPL, which stands for "GNU is not Unix" General Public License.  (Unix was the name of a popular "closed" operating system.)  The GNU-GPL allows users to run, copy, distribute, study, change, and improve the software to which it is applied.  More specifically, the GNU-GPL grants users [http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html four kinds of freedoms((.link_red))]:


* The freedom to run the program for any purpose (freedom 0).
* The freedom to run the program for any purpose (freedom 0).
* The freedom to study how the program works, and to adapt it to your needs (freedom 1). Access to the source code is a precondition for this.
* The freedom to study how the program works and to adapt it to your needs (freedom 1). Access to the source code is a precondition for this.
* The freedom to redistribute copies so you can help your neighbor (freedom 2).
* The freedom to redistribute copies so you can help your neighbor (freedom 2).
* The freedom to improve the program, and release your improvements (and modified versions in general) to the public, so that the whole community benefits (freedom 3). Access to the source code is a precondition for this”: modifications must be shared with the same degree of freedom.
* The freedom to improve the program and release your improvements (and modified versions in general) to the public, so that the whole community benefits (freedom 3). Access to the source code is a precondition for this, and modifications must be shared with the same degree of freedom.


Adoption of this approach does not mean that the price of the product must equal zero. Stallman intended the term “free software” to connote “free speech,” not “free beer.” Others distinguish using the French '''libre''' (meaning freedom) vs. '''gratis''' (meaning no cost). Nevertheless, free software is commonly both libre AND gratis.  
In what sense, exactly, is software licensed on these terms, "free"?  Stallman suggested that analytical clarity could be enhanced by differentiating two meanings of "free" -- one that appears in the phrase, “free speech”; the other that appears in the phrase, “free beer.” Other commentators distinguish these concepts by using the French terms, '''libre''' (meaning freedom) and '''gratis''' (meaning no cost). Relying on this distinction, Stallman argued that free software was "free" in the first sense, but not necessarily in the second sense.  In other words, some "free software" is sold for a fee.  That said, in practice most  free software currently is "free" in both senses -- in other words, both libre AND gratis.  


There are many incentives that drive the creation of gratis software. A developer might find it entertaining to do so. She might be driven by a desire to contribute to the public domain. She may want to build her reputation as a programmer. She may distribute the software for free but charge users for help customizing it to their needs.  Economists continue to discuss whether incentives of these various sorts are sufficient to sustain a viable business.  Meanwhile, businesses relying on this approach are flourishing.
There are many incentives that drive the creation of free software. A developer might find it entertaining to do so. She might be driven by a desire to contribute to the public domain. She might want to build her reputation as a programmer. She might distribute the software for free but charge users for help in customizing it to their needs.  Economists continue to discuss whether incentives of these various sorts are sufficient to sustain a viable business.  Meanwhile, businesses relying on this approach are flourishing.


== Creative Commons ==
== Creative Commons ==


'''Introduction'''
====Introduction====
 
Creative Commons is a non-profit organization created in 2001 by a group of scholars and activists. It was founded and led for a long time by renowned cyberlaw scholar [http://lessig.org Lawrence Lessig].
 
Creative Commons provides authors convenient ways to authorize specific uses of their works, while retaining control over other uses. In other words, it allows them easily to create their own licenses, minimize the orphan works problem, and contribute to culture and free expression.
 
====The license options====
 
Creative Commons offers a set of six licenses from which authors and artists can [http://creativecommons.org/license/ choose online((.link_red))].
 
The CC licenses are combinations of one, two or three of the following four elements:
* Attribution (BY): You let others use your work but only if they give credit the way you request. Attribution is required for all Creative Commons licenses.
* Non-Commercial (NC): You let others use your work but for noncommercial purposes only.  This does not mean that works cannot be used for commercial purposes, but that a separate license must be obtained by a user who wishes to use the work commerciallys.
* Non Derivative (ND): You let others copy, distribute, display, and perform only verbatim copies of your work, not derivative works based upon it. The right to make adaptations can be licensed under a separate agreement.
* Share Alike (SA): You allow others to make derivatives from your original work but they are permitted to distribute derivative works only under the same terms as the license that governs your work, or a license that is compatible with those terms. SA is used to prevent people from taking something from the commons and then locking it up by using a more restrictive license.
 
The license terms, “Non Derivative” and “Share Alike,” are not compatible and cannot be found in the same license. This is because it doesn't make sense to tell people they should incorporate your work and share it alike while also telling them they may not make derivative copies of it.
 
All of the licenses are non-exclusive.  In other words, authors are free to enter into other agreements with specific users.  For example, it is possible for copyright holders who have issued CC licenses to enter into fee-bearing licenses for rights to engage in activities not covered by the CC license in question. In this way a songwriter might release her music for free on the Internet and still charge a company for using it in a commercial.


Creative Commons is a non-profit organization created in 2001 by a group of scholars and activistsThe intellectual and organization leader of the organization was Lawrence Lessig, a law professor who litigated the case Eldred vs. Ashcroft, as it was discussed in [[Module 3: The Scope of Copyright Law]].
Creative Commons licenses do not address an author's moral rights in any country except CanadaAccordingly, a work that is governed by even the most liberal Creative Commons license may still be subject to certain restrictions on use, in accordance with your country's provisions on moral rights.


Creative Commons provides authors convenient ways to authorize specific uses of their works, while retaining control over other uses.
Creative Commons, like the copyright regime as a whole, has no registration system; it merely provides information for authors who wish to license their works on nontraditional terms.


'''The license options'''
The  Creative Commons website provides a simple quiz asking creators what freedoms they'd like to allow with their work. It then gives the creator a choice of appropriate licenses from which to choose. The quiz also allows the author to specify which country's laws will govern the license.  Currently, the Creative Commons license has been translated or "ported" to the laws of 52 countries, and many more countries are currently under development.


Creative Commons offers a set of six licenses, which authors can select online by answering to the following questions on a license selection interface: http://creativecommons.org/license/
Once a creator has selected a license, she attaches this license to copies of her work, thus alerting users to what they can and cannot do.  If the work is (or is offered through) a website, the author can do this by adding to the site a piece of HTML code that generates a button with the Creative Commons logo containing a link to the license at issue.


As described at http://creativecommons.org/about/licenses/:
====Creative Commons Licenses Formats====


The CC licenses are a combination of one, two or three of the following four elements:
Each of the CC licenses is available in three formats suitable for online use:


- Attribution (BY): You let others use your work but only if they give credit the way you request.
* A machine-readable version, or digital code, which is embedded in the Creative Commons logo and informs other computers of the license.
* The human readable code, or common deed (a summary explaining the main rights and freedoms, with icons corresponding to the elements which have been selected), available from the link embedded in the logo.
* The legal code (a license of several pages written in legal language, detailing the clauses, which are represented by the icons), available from a link at the end of the human readable code.


- Non-Commercial (NC): You let others use your work but for noncommercial purposes only. It does not mean that works cannot be used for commercial purposes, but that a separate license should be negotiated for commercial rights.
Creative Commons licenses can be used for works made and distributed offline as well. For instance, a work created in the physical world might have a physical license attached that reads: ''"This work is licensed under the Creative Commons BY-SA License. To view a copy of this license, visit the Creative Commons website."'' Unfortunately, offline works cannot be included in the Creative Commons search engine that catalogs freely available works on the website.  


- Non Derivative (ND): You let others copy, distribute, display, and perform only verbatim copies of your work, not derivative works based upon it. The right to make adaptations can be licensed under a separate agreement.
There is an extended explanation of how to attach Creative Commons licenses to works on the [http://wiki.creativecommons.org/Marking Creative Commons website].


- Share Alike (SA): You allow others to make derivatives from your original work but they should distribute derivative works only under a license identical to the license that governs your work.
====The Scope of the License====


The combination of the above elements produces the 6 following licenses:
A Creative Commons license only applies to material to which the licensor has rights.  It does not apply to material the licensor has acquired from other sources and to which he does not have rights.


- Attribution (BY)
Suppose, for example, that a teacher prepares a Powerpoint slide presentation, which he plans to use for classroom teaching.  He downloads some photographs illustrating his arguments from the Internet and inserts them into the presentation  -- believing, plausibly, that the use of the photos for teaching falls within one of the exceptions and limitations contained in the copyright law of his country.  He attaches a simple "Attribution" Creative Commons license to each of his slides.  In other words, he grants anyone permission to use the slides for any purpose, provided that they give him credit.  One of the students in the class obtains a digital copy of the slide presentation and emails it to a friend working in a for-profit company.  The friend finds the slides helpful and distributes copies of them at a commercial sales meeting.  Most likely, the friend will have violated the nation's copyright law.  Why?  Because the Creative Commons license does not apply to the photos, and the reproduction of them for commercial purposes probably does not fall into any of the exceptions and limitations.


This license lets others distribute, remix, tweak, and build upon your work, even commercially, as long as they credit you for the  
This principle is not widely understood, and even the formal version of the Creative Commons license is not crystal clear on this point. To avoid confusion, it is best for licensors using Creative Commons licenses to specify what those licenses do and do not cover.
original creation. This is the most accommodating of licenses offered, in terms of what others can do with your works licensed under Attribution.


- Attribution Share Alike (BY SA)
====Other Creative Commons Projects====
This license lets others remix, tweak, and build upon your work even for commercial reasons, as long as they credit you and license their new creations under the identical terms. This license is often compared to open source software licenses. All new works based on yours will carry the same license, so any derivatives will also allow commercial use.


- Attribution No Derivatives (BY ND)
=====Creative Commons International=====
This license allows for redistribution, commercial and non-commercial, as long as it is passed along unchanged and in whole, with credit to you.


- Attribution Non-Commercial (BY NC)
The [http://creativecommons.org/international/ Creative Commons International] (CCi) team coordinates the process of translating the Creative Commons licenses into other languages and adapting them to other legal systems. This is a complex and challenging process.  CCi also provides teams to work with local user communities and governments in order to increase understanding and use of CC licenses.  The local teams also work closely with CC staff to improve the license clauses and material.
This license lets others remix, tweak, and build upon your work non-commercially, and although their new works must also acknowledge you and be non-commercial, they don’t have to license their derivative works on the same terms.


- Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike (BY NC SA)
=====Educational and Science Commons=====
This license lets others remix, tweak, and build upon your work non-commercially, as long as they credit you and license their new creations under the identical terms. Others can download and redistribute your work just like the by-nc-nd license, but they can also translate, make remixes, and produce new stories based on your work. All new work based on yours will carry the same license, so any derivatives will also be non-commercial in nature.


- Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives (BY NC ND)
Two other divisions of Creative Commons also engage in specialized work: [http://learn.creativecommons.org/ ccLearn((.link_green))] for open educational resources and [http://sciencecommons.org/ Science Commons((.link_green))] for open access to science.
This license is the most restrictive of the six main licenses, allowing redistribution. This license is often called the “free advertising” license because it allows others to download your works and share them with others as long as they mention you and link back to you, but they can’t change them in any way or use them commercially.


By answering the questions on the license selection interface, an author will be directed to the license that best matches his or her preferences.  He or she attaches this license to copies of his or her work, thus alerting users to what they can and cannot do.  If the work is (or is offered through) a website, the author can do this by adding to the site a piece of html code generates a button with the Creative Commons logo containing a link to the license at issue.
=====New Creative Commons Protocols=====


'''Creative Commons licenses formats'''
In addition to the six licenses, Creative Commons has recently developed two new protocols: CC+ and CC0.


Each of the CC licenses is available in three formats:
[http://wiki.creativecommons.org/CCPlus CC+] (CC “Plus”) is not a license but a technology for offering users rights beyond the CC license grant -- for instance commercial rights -- or additional warranties.


- The machine-readable, or digital code (the metadata embedded in the logo),
[http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/ CC0] (CC “Zero”) is a universal waiver of copyright, neighboring and related rights, and sui generis rights.  CC0 thus enables authors to place their works in the public domain.  CC0 is sometimes known as the “no rights reserved” option. Under the laws of certain countries, however, it is not possible for an author to grant a blanket waiver of his or her moral rights.  Nor can an author waive the rights that others may have relating to the use of a work (for example, the publicity rights that the subject of a photograph may have).


- The human readable code, or common deed (a summary explaining the main clauses, with icons corresponding to the elements which have been selected), available from the link embedded in the logo,
A possible implementation model for digital libraries would be to propose a combination of:


- The legal code (a license of several pages written in legal language, detailing the clauses, which are represented by the icons), available from a link at the end of the human readable code.
* CC licenses for works created by librarians: abstracts, comments, photographs, maps, other copyrightable elements of the editorial structure;
* CC licenses for works created by patrons: comments, abstracts, critics, blog posts;
* CC0 licenses for databases of public domain works to which the libraries have added potentially copyrightable material.


The owners of the copyrights in works made available through channels other than the Internet can provide potential users similar information, but marking their works with statements like the following:  « This work is licensed under the Creative Commons [insert description] License. To view a copy of this license, visit [insert url] ».  Offline works do not contain the metadata, and are not identifiable by the Creative Commons search engines.
====Implications for Authors and for Users====


'''Creative Commons licenses main clauses'''
Authors considering applying Creative Commons licenses to their creations should consider the following issues: 


As indicate above, all Creative Commons licenses authorize the public at least to copy, perform, and distribute the work for free, provided that the original author is properly attributed and that no direct remuneration is received in exchange for the work.  License options specify whether a work can or cannot be used for commercial purposes, and if the work may be adapted or only used without modification.   
The licenses are based on copyright law, and are thus applicable only to copyrightable works.   


The Attribution license element is not optional; it is included by default in all the licenses. (It was optional in the first version of the licenses, but almost 98% of the users were selecting it on the interface, so Creative Commons decided to make attribution standard, thus reducing the number of licenses.)
In many countries,  collecting societies require their members to assign all of their rights in present and future works to the societies. Thus, members cannot use Creative Commons licenses, even for some of their works or some of their rights.  


The license terms, “Non Derivative” and “Share Alike,” are not compatible and cannot be found in the same license.  
Many authors do not understand why the two systems are not compatible, especially in the music industry. They would like to license their non-commercial rights for free under a Creative Commons license and assign the management of their commercial rights to a collecting society. This model is possible for some collecting societies in some countries, such as the United States, the Netherlands or Denmark.  But other collecting societies do not use the same legal categories as Creative Commons.  For instance, they may not  recognize the distinction between commercial and non-commercial uses. In those countries, authors are currently forced to choose one system or the other.


All of the licenses are non-exclusive. In other words, authors are free to enter into other agreements with specific users.  For example, it is possible for copyright owners who have issued CC licenses to enter into fee-bearing licenses for rights to engage in activities not covered by the CC license in question.
Creative Commons staff and international affiliates have been working with collecting societies in hopes of resolving this incompatibility. Unfortunately, some collecting societies and other copyright stakeholders are skeptical of Creative Commons licenses and are thus reluctant to move forward. Their criticisms of the Creative Commons model include:


Creative Commons, like the copyright regime as a whole, has no registration system; it merely provides information for authors who wish to license their works on nontraditional terms.  
* The Creative Commons system does not provide creators a way to collect money; creators thus must organize for themselves a way to charge for activities that fall outside the CC license terms.
* Creative Commons does not track infringements and is not authorized to represent licensors in lawsuits or help them enforce the licenses.
* Creative Commons licenses are non-revocable, and the license grant is perpetual.  Authors who employ CC licenses thus cannot later change their minds.  They can, of course, cease distributing the works or distribute them under different conditions, but this will not affect the rights associated with the copies that are already in circulation.
* Determining what does and does not constitute a commercial use is a difficult question, and answers may vary among individuals and user communities.
* It is questionable whether jurisdiction-specific licenses, which have been adapted to national legal systems, are really compatible with each other.  For instance, some versions of the CC licenses include moral rights or database rights; others do not.


Best practices for marking and crediting works in different formats are available at: http://wiki.creativecommons.org/Marking
==The Open Access movement==


The Open Access (OA) movement seeks to increase the public availability of works of scholarship.  It was provoked by a rapid rise in the price of scientific journals, forcing many libraries to cancel journal subscriptions.  The movement claims that authors should be able to access freely their colleagues’ research for the benefit of science and the general public.


'''Creative Commons other projects'''
OA journals offer articles to the public online for free. They often use very open online licenses, such as the Creative Commons Attribution license.  This strategy is sometimes known as “Gold Open Access.”  Because they forgo traditional sources of revenue, OA journals must devise alternative business models.  Some charge authors for publication of their work.  Others rely entirely the work of volunteers.


The [http://creativecommons.org/international/ Creative Commons International] (CCi) team coordinates the process of translating the creative commons licenses into other languages and adapting them to other legal systems – a complex and challenging processThe internationalization process also provides local teams who work in their countries with user communities and governments to increase understanding and use of the system.  The local teams also work closely with CC staff to improve the license clauses and material.
Some journals are not OA journals, but authorize the authors of the articles they publish to archive versions of their articles in institutional repositories set up by their universities. This strategy is sometimes called “Green Open Access.”  Some Green Open Access journals also allow authors to upload their work to free, discipline-specific public repositories, like the [http://www.ssrn.com Social Science Research Network].  Journal copyright policies regarding self-archiving are analyzed by the project [http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/ Sherpa RoMEO((.link_green))]More than 50% of pay-journal policies allow their authors to archive their pre-print articles in open access repositories.


Two other divisions of Creative Commons also engage in specialized work: [http://learn.creativecommons.org/ ccLearn] for open educational resources and [http://sciencecommons.org/ Science Commons] for open access to science.
Some journals do not generally allow authors to host open-copies of their articles on their own websites.  In these situations, authors may formally request that the publishing contract allow them to do so.  Several addendum models are available. "SCAE," the [http://sciencecommons.org/projects/publishing/scae/ Science Commons Scholars’ Copyright Addendum Engine] generates one such form.


In addition to the licenses, two protocols have been recently developed: CC+ and CC0.
Funding institutions can facilitate or compel the use of one or more of these strategies by encouraging or requiring grant recipients to make the fruits of their projects publicly available.  Currently, the National Institutes of Health in the United States, the European Research Council, and the Wellcome Trust in the United Kingdom require their grantees to make their work publicly accessible.


[http://wiki.creativecommons.org/CCPlus/ CC+] (CC “Plus”) is not a license, but technologies for offering users rights beyond the CC license grant -- for instance commercial rights, or additional warranties.
Universities can also help. Harvard University has led the way on this issue. Starting in 2008, some schools within Harvard have required faculty members to provide the university with a non-exclusive, irrevocable, worldwide license to distribute their scholarly articles for non-commercial uses.  However, a faculty member may override this default rule by obtaining a waiver for a specific article.  


[http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/ CC0] (CC “Zero”) is a universal waiver of copyright, neighboring and related rights, and sui generis rights.  CC0 thus enables authors to place their works in the public domain.  CC0 is sometimes known as the “no rights reserved” option.


A possible implementation model for digital libraries would be to propose a combination of:
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- CC licenses for works created by librarians: abstracts, comments, photographs, maps, other copyrightable elements of the editorial structure;
 
== [[Image:casestudy.png|50px|]]Back to the case study ==


- CC licenses for works created by patrons: comments, abstracts, critics, blog posts;
Angela complains to Nadia that she cannot include in her course pack the article from a colleague because he transferred his rights to the publisher. Nadia informs Angela that some publishers have very strict policies, but that sometimes publishing contracts are in fact less restrictive than some authors may think. Together, they will search for the journal policy to see whether the article could be included.


- CC0 licenses for databases of public domain works to which the libraries have added potentially copyrightable material.
Together, they will browse [http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/ Sherpa RoMEO] because it “provides a listing of publishers' copyright conditions as they relate to authors archiving their work on-line.


Finally, Nadia will suggest to Angela that, together, they provide the colleague information concerning Creative Commons, Open Access, and other systems that have been developed recently that might enable the colleague in the future to ensure that access to his scholarship is more open.


'''Implications for authors and for users'''
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Authors must consider various questions before deciding to apply Creative Commons licenses to their creations.  The licenses are based on copyright, and are thus applicable only to copyrightable works.  Authors also should be sure that they have the authority to issue the licenses; they may be obliged to check first with co-authors, authors of pre-existing works, or employers.  In many countries,  collecting societies require their members to assign all their rights in present and future works to the societies. Thus, members cannot use a Creative Commons licenses, even for some of their works or some of their rights. Many authors do not understand why both systems are not compatible, especially in the music industry. They would like to license their non-commercial rights for free under a Creative Commons license, and assign the management of their commercial rights to a collecting society. This model is possible for some collecting societies in some countries, such as the United States, the Netherlands or Denmark. But other collecting societies do not use the same legal categories as Creative Commons.  (For instance, they may not  recognize the distinction between commercial and non-commercial uses.)  In those countries, authors are currently forced to choose one system or the other.
==[[image:resource.png|50px|]] Additional resources ==


Creative Commons staff and international affiliates have been talking with collecting societies in hopes of resolving this incompatibility, but some collecting societies and other copyright stakeholders are skeptical of Creative Commons licenses and are thus reluctant to move forwardHere are their principal criticisms:
An extensive set of teaching materials on Free and Open Source Software can be found at the course website for [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/iif/Encouraging_the_Intellectual_Commons The Internet: Issues at the Frontier((.link_red))].


· The Creative Commons system does not provide creators a way to collect money; creators thus must organize for themselves a way to charge for activities that fall outside the CC license terms.
Other valuable resources on free software include:  
· Creative Commons does not track infringements and is not authorized to represent licensors in lawsuits or help them enforce the licenses.
· Creative Commons licenses are non-revocable, and the license grant is perpetual.  Authors who employ CC licenses thus cannot later change their minds.  They can, of course, cease distributing the works or distribute them under different conditions, but this will not affect the rights associated with the copies that are already in circulation.
· There is no central registry or authority to verify that licensors have all the rights they need to use a CC license.
· Determining what does and does not constitute a commercial use is a difficult question; answers may vary among individuals and user communities.
· It is questionable whether jurisdiction-specific licenses, which have been adapted to national legal systems, are really compatible with each other. For instance, some versions of the CC licenses include moral rights or database rights; others do not.


'''The Open Access movement'''
* [http://mitpress.mit.edu/catalog/item/default.asp?ttype=2&tid=11216&mode=toc Joseph Feller et al., Perspectives on Free and Open Source Software (2007)((.link_green))]


The Open Access (OA) movement proposes to adapt scholarly publishing culture to the web. The movement was provoked by a rapid rise in the price of scientific journals, leading many libraries to cancel journal subscriptions. The movement claims that authors should be able to access freely their colleagues’ research for the benefit of science and the general public. The Budapest Open Access Initiative provides an influencial definition for OA. The most complete and up-to-date resource on Open Access is Peter Suber’s Open Access News.
* [http://www.people.hbs.edu/jlerner/simple.pdf Josh Lerner and Jean Tirole, "The Simple Economics of Open Source" (2000)((.link_green))]


OA journals offer articles to the public online for free, for instance under a Creative Commons “Attribution” license. This is sometimes known as “Gold Open Access.”  Such journals typically are accessible for free online. Because they forgo traditional sources of revenue, OA journals must devise alternative business models. Some charge authors.  Others rely entirely on voluntary work.  A Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) can be found at http://www.doaj.org/
* [http://moglen.law.columbia.edu/911/ Eben Moglen, Faculty Presentation on Open Source, September 11, 2008((.link_red))]


Some journals are not Open Access journals, but authorize the authors of the articles they publish the option to archive versions of their articles in Institutional Repositories set up by their universities. This is sometimes called “Green Open Access.”  Journal copyright policies regarding self-archiving are analyzed by the project Sherpa RoMEO: http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/. More than 50% of pay-journal policies allow their authors to archive their pre-print articles in open access repositories.
* [http://twobits.net/pub/Kelty-TwoBits.pdf Christopher Kelty, Two Bits: The Cultural Significance of Free Software (2008]


Authors who contribute articles to journals that do not routinely allow authors to self-archive their articles on their own websites or in institutional repositories, sometimes request that the journals agree to an addendum to the publishing contract (read more about this on [[Module 2: The international framework]], contracts section), pursuant to which the authors reserve rights needed to self-archive. Several addendum models are available. The Science Commons Scholars’ Copyright Addendum Engine generates one such form.
* [http://www.google.com/url?sa=U&start=1&q=http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/~wseltzer/openlaw.ppt&ei=bvqMSemGB9WDtweirqWqCw&usg=AFQjCNG-5tUD8K5tZuQFhNL6BTV_z_8LgQ Wendy Seltzer, Open Source as Open Law] (Powerpoint Presentation)


Funding institutions can facilitate or compel use of one or more of these strategies – by encouraging or requiring grant recipients to make fruits of their projects publicly available. Currently, the National Institutes of Health in the United States, the European Research Council, and the Wellcome Trust in the UK underwrite in various ways the OA approach.
The main website for Creative Commons is [http://creativecommons.org/ http://creativecommons.org/((.link_red))]


Universities can also help.  Harvard University has led the way on this issue.  Starting in 2008, the faculties of some schools within Harvard have adopted policies providing that faculty members automatically provide to the university non-exclusive, irrevocable, worldwide license to distribute their scholarly articles for non-commercial uses.  A faculty member can override this default rule by obtaining a waiver for a specific article. How many will do so remains to be seen.  
A large repository of photographs available under Creative Commons licenses is available through [http://www.flickr.com/creativecommons/ Flickr]


A thorough discussion, prepared in 2007 by Peter Suber, of the various dimensions of the Open Access Movement can be found at the [http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/overview.htm Open Access Overview((.link_green))]


<div style="border: 1px solid #ffcc01; padding: .5em 1em; background-color:#ffffff; margin: 3px 3px 1em 3px;">
The most important document in the OA Movement is the Budapest Open Access Initiative.  Its history and impact are discussed on [http://www.soros.org/openaccess/index.shtml the website of the Soros Foundation((.link_red))]


== Back to the case study ==
A Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) can be found [http://www.doaj.org/ here((.link_green))]


Angela complains to Nadia that she cannot include in her course pack the article from a colleague because he transferred his rights to the publisher. Nadia informs Angela that some publishers have very strict policies, but that sometimes publishing contracts are in fact less restrictive than some authors may think. Together, they will search for the journal policy to see whether the article could be included and, if so, on what basis. If rights have been exclusively assigned for the publisher’s post-print PDF, perhaps the pre-print or the submitted version can be reused.
A sampler of Open Access Journals in the Health Sciences:
Together, they will browse the Sherpa RoMEO site: http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/ that “provides a listing of publishers' copyright conditions as they relate to authors archiving their work on-line.”
* [http://www.bentham.org/open/todentj/ The Open Dentistry Journal]
* [http://www.hindawi.com/journals/ijd/ International Journal of Dentistry]
* [http://www.plosmedicine.org PLoS Medicine]
* [http://www.biomedcentral.com/browse/journals/ BioMed OA Medical Journals]
* [http://www.bioline.org.br/journals BioLine International OA Journals]
* [http://www.la-press.com/ Open Access Medical Journals]
* [http://www.dovepress.com/open-access-emergency-medicine-journal Open Access Emergency Medicine Journal]
* [http://www.safpj.co.za/index.php/safpj South African Family Practice]
* [http://www.phcfm.org/index.php/phcfm/about African Journal of Primary Health Care and Family Medicine]


</div>
== Cases ==


== Assignment and discussion questions ==
The following judicial opinions explore and apply some of the principles discussed in this module:


'''Round 1 questions'''
[http://creativecommons.org/press-releases/entry/5822 Curry v. Weekend (District Court of Amsterdam, March 9, 2006)((.link_red))] (Creative Commons license)


Choose one of the following:
[http://gpl-violations.org/news/20060922-dlink-judgement_frankfurt.html GPL-Violations.org v. D-Link (District Court of Frankfurt 2006)((.link_green))]


Question 1. Works from your country are probably available under a Creative Commons license. Use search engines and other directories to locate some documents available under CC licenses that you could help promote and re-distribute.  
[http://www.law.berkeley.edu/institutes/bclt/students/2009_spring_intro_ip/Jacobsen%20v%20Katzer%20-%20Westlaw.pdf Jacobsen v. Katzer, 535 F.3d 1373 (CAFC 2008)((.link_red))] (Open Source Licenses)


Question 2. Determine if there are any OA journals published in your country.  Make a list suitable for distribution to your patrons.  
== [[image:question.png|50px|]] Assignment and discussion questions ==


Question 3.  Prepare slides or a one-page handout in your language that you could use to educate librarians and academics concerning the Creative Commons system and OA options.  Publish your document online with the Creative Commons license of your choice and send the link to the group. If your library doesn’t have a website, you may use http://www.slideshare.net/
'''[[image:assignment.png|50px|]]Assignment'''


Question 4.  How would you design and implement an OA policy in your country?
Choose one of the following:


'''Round 2 question'''
Question 1.  Creative Commons currently supports the licensing of creative works in 52 countries. If your country is one of these, use search engines and other directories to locate some documents available under CC licenses that you could help promote and re-distribute.


Comment on strategies proposed by your colleagues in response to Round 1 question 4.
Question 2. Determine if there are any OA journals published in your country.  Make a list suitable for distribution to your patrons.  


Question 3.  Prepare slides or a one-page handout that you could use to educate librarians and academics concerning the Creative Commons system and OA options.  Publish your document online with the Creative Commons license of your choice and send the link to the group. If your library doesn’t have a website, you may use [http://www.slideshare.net/ SlideShare].


<div style="border: 1px solid #ffcc01; padding: .5em 1em; background-color:#ffffcc; margin: 3px 3px 1em 3px;">
Question 4. How would you design and implement an OA policy in your country?


'''Quick Access'''
'''[[image:discussion.png|50px]]Discussion Question(s)'''


* [http://cnx.org/content/col10698/latest/ Connexions]
Comment on strategies proposed by your colleagues in response to question 4.
* [http://h2o.law.harvard.edu/ViewProject.do?projectID=1012 Rotisserie]


'''The textbook modules are available both on [http://cnx.org/content/col10698/latest/ Connexions] and on this wiki'''
== Contributors ==


* '''[[Module 1]]'''
This module was  created by [[Contributors#rosnay|Melanie Dulong de Rosnay]]. It was then edited by a team including [[Contributors#diaz|Sebastian Diaz]], [[Contributors#fisher|William Fisher]], [[Contributors#gasser|Urs Gasser]], [[Contributors#holland|Adam Holland]], [[Contributors#isbell|Kimberley Isbell]], [[Contributors#jaszi|Peter Jaszi]], [[Contributors#maclay|Colin Maclay]], [[Contributors#moshirnia|Andrew Moshirnia]], and [[Contributors#peterson|Chris Peterson]].
* '''[[Module 2]]'''
* '''[[Module 3]]'''
* '''[[Module 4]]'''
* '''[[Module 5]]'''
* '''[[Module 6]]'''
* '''[[Module 7]]'''


</div>
{{NavFooter}}

Latest revision as of 16:16, 18 January 2012

Key.png Learning objective

Traditional rights management often involves an exclusive assignment of all of the rights associated with a copyright from the author to a publisher. The publisher then makes copies and distributes the work to the public for a fee.

By contrast, free, libre and open access models disseminate works at no cost to the user. This module describes these alternative approaches, focusing on Creative Commons licensing and Open Access policy for scientific publications.


Casestudy.pngCase study

Angela writes Nadia the following email: “A professor at our university is the author of one of the articles I want to include in the course pack. However, when I contacted him to request his permission, he answered that he had already transferred all his rights to a publisher and thus wasn’t able to allow me to copy his work. How can it be possible that someone can’t even authorize use of his own work? What could be done to avoid this situation in the future?”

How should Nadia respond?

Lesson.png Lesson

Introduction: Physical and Digital Commons

Physical objects are often scarce and rivalrous. This means that there are a limited number of such objects, and using one decreases the total amount that can be consumed. For example, an apple can be eaten by only one person, and when it is eaten, fewer apples are available to be consumed by other people.

By contrast, the intellectual products governed by copyright law typically are nonrivalrous. A novel, for example, may be read and enjoyed by an unlimited number of people.

Digital technology has sharply reduced the cost of making copies of embodiments of intellectual products and thus has highlighted the nonrivalrous character of those products. If the novel (to continue our example) is in an electronic format, an unlimited number of copies of it can be made and distributed very cheaply.

The wide distribution of intellectual products is socially beneficial. If that widespread distribution can be accomplished very inexpensively, why doesn't the law permit it? As we saw in Module 1, the conventional answer is that prohibitions on copying are necessary to preserve incentives for novelists to write novels in the first instance.

In a growing number of contexts, reformers are challenging that answer. Authors of some works -- or some kinds of works -- may not need all of the rights that copyright law gives them in order to remain motivated to produce creative works. In such settings, copyright law may do more harm than good. To deal with situations of this sort, the reformers have developed various systems to facilitate more widespread use of creative works than the copyright system contemplates. This module describes those systems.

Free Software Licenses

Most commercial software programs are distributed under restrictive terms of use. Moreover, their source code -- the code that makes the program run -- is closed. As a result, developers cannot study the code to understand how it works, to fix bugs, or to customize it to their needs.

A radically different approach to software was first developed by Richard Stallman when he was a researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Stallman became angry when he could not modify the software for a printer in his office that was not working properly. Provoked by this and other experiences, Stallman created the GNU-GPL, which stands for "GNU is not Unix" General Public License. (Unix was the name of a popular "closed" operating system.) The GNU-GPL allows users to run, copy, distribute, study, change, and improve the software to which it is applied. More specifically, the GNU-GPL grants users four kinds of freedoms((.link_red)):

  • The freedom to run the program for any purpose (freedom 0).
  • The freedom to study how the program works and to adapt it to your needs (freedom 1). Access to the source code is a precondition for this.
  • The freedom to redistribute copies so you can help your neighbor (freedom 2).
  • The freedom to improve the program and release your improvements (and modified versions in general) to the public, so that the whole community benefits (freedom 3). Access to the source code is a precondition for this, and modifications must be shared with the same degree of freedom.

In what sense, exactly, is software licensed on these terms, "free"? Stallman suggested that analytical clarity could be enhanced by differentiating two meanings of "free" -- one that appears in the phrase, “free speech”; the other that appears in the phrase, “free beer.” Other commentators distinguish these concepts by using the French terms, libre (meaning freedom) and gratis (meaning no cost). Relying on this distinction, Stallman argued that free software was "free" in the first sense, but not necessarily in the second sense. In other words, some "free software" is sold for a fee. That said, in practice most free software currently is "free" in both senses -- in other words, both libre AND gratis.

There are many incentives that drive the creation of free software. A developer might find it entertaining to do so. She might be driven by a desire to contribute to the public domain. She might want to build her reputation as a programmer. She might distribute the software for free but charge users for help in customizing it to their needs. Economists continue to discuss whether incentives of these various sorts are sufficient to sustain a viable business. Meanwhile, businesses relying on this approach are flourishing.

Creative Commons

Introduction

Creative Commons is a non-profit organization created in 2001 by a group of scholars and activists. It was founded and led for a long time by renowned cyberlaw scholar Lawrence Lessig.

Creative Commons provides authors convenient ways to authorize specific uses of their works, while retaining control over other uses. In other words, it allows them easily to create their own licenses, minimize the orphan works problem, and contribute to culture and free expression.

The license options

Creative Commons offers a set of six licenses from which authors and artists can choose online((.link_red)).

The CC licenses are combinations of one, two or three of the following four elements:

  • Attribution (BY): You let others use your work but only if they give credit the way you request. Attribution is required for all Creative Commons licenses.
  • Non-Commercial (NC): You let others use your work but for noncommercial purposes only. This does not mean that works cannot be used for commercial purposes, but that a separate license must be obtained by a user who wishes to use the work commerciallys.
  • Non Derivative (ND): You let others copy, distribute, display, and perform only verbatim copies of your work, not derivative works based upon it. The right to make adaptations can be licensed under a separate agreement.
  • Share Alike (SA): You allow others to make derivatives from your original work but they are permitted to distribute derivative works only under the same terms as the license that governs your work, or a license that is compatible with those terms. SA is used to prevent people from taking something from the commons and then locking it up by using a more restrictive license.

The license terms, “Non Derivative” and “Share Alike,” are not compatible and cannot be found in the same license. This is because it doesn't make sense to tell people they should incorporate your work and share it alike while also telling them they may not make derivative copies of it.

All of the licenses are non-exclusive. In other words, authors are free to enter into other agreements with specific users. For example, it is possible for copyright holders who have issued CC licenses to enter into fee-bearing licenses for rights to engage in activities not covered by the CC license in question. In this way a songwriter might release her music for free on the Internet and still charge a company for using it in a commercial.

Creative Commons licenses do not address an author's moral rights in any country except Canada. Accordingly, a work that is governed by even the most liberal Creative Commons license may still be subject to certain restrictions on use, in accordance with your country's provisions on moral rights.

Creative Commons, like the copyright regime as a whole, has no registration system; it merely provides information for authors who wish to license their works on nontraditional terms.

The Creative Commons website provides a simple quiz asking creators what freedoms they'd like to allow with their work. It then gives the creator a choice of appropriate licenses from which to choose. The quiz also allows the author to specify which country's laws will govern the license. Currently, the Creative Commons license has been translated or "ported" to the laws of 52 countries, and many more countries are currently under development.

Once a creator has selected a license, she attaches this license to copies of her work, thus alerting users to what they can and cannot do. If the work is (or is offered through) a website, the author can do this by adding to the site a piece of HTML code that generates a button with the Creative Commons logo containing a link to the license at issue.

Creative Commons Licenses Formats

Each of the CC licenses is available in three formats suitable for online use:

  • A machine-readable version, or digital code, which is embedded in the Creative Commons logo and informs other computers of the license.
  • The human readable code, or common deed (a summary explaining the main rights and freedoms, with icons corresponding to the elements which have been selected), available from the link embedded in the logo.
  • The legal code (a license of several pages written in legal language, detailing the clauses, which are represented by the icons), available from a link at the end of the human readable code.

Creative Commons licenses can be used for works made and distributed offline as well. For instance, a work created in the physical world might have a physical license attached that reads: "This work is licensed under the Creative Commons BY-SA License. To view a copy of this license, visit the Creative Commons website." Unfortunately, offline works cannot be included in the Creative Commons search engine that catalogs freely available works on the website.

There is an extended explanation of how to attach Creative Commons licenses to works on the Creative Commons website.

The Scope of the License

A Creative Commons license only applies to material to which the licensor has rights. It does not apply to material the licensor has acquired from other sources and to which he does not have rights.

Suppose, for example, that a teacher prepares a Powerpoint slide presentation, which he plans to use for classroom teaching. He downloads some photographs illustrating his arguments from the Internet and inserts them into the presentation -- believing, plausibly, that the use of the photos for teaching falls within one of the exceptions and limitations contained in the copyright law of his country. He attaches a simple "Attribution" Creative Commons license to each of his slides. In other words, he grants anyone permission to use the slides for any purpose, provided that they give him credit. One of the students in the class obtains a digital copy of the slide presentation and emails it to a friend working in a for-profit company. The friend finds the slides helpful and distributes copies of them at a commercial sales meeting. Most likely, the friend will have violated the nation's copyright law. Why? Because the Creative Commons license does not apply to the photos, and the reproduction of them for commercial purposes probably does not fall into any of the exceptions and limitations.

This principle is not widely understood, and even the formal version of the Creative Commons license is not crystal clear on this point. To avoid confusion, it is best for licensors using Creative Commons licenses to specify what those licenses do and do not cover.

Other Creative Commons Projects

Creative Commons International

The Creative Commons International (CCi) team coordinates the process of translating the Creative Commons licenses into other languages and adapting them to other legal systems. This is a complex and challenging process. CCi also provides teams to work with local user communities and governments in order to increase understanding and use of CC licenses. The local teams also work closely with CC staff to improve the license clauses and material.

Educational and Science Commons

Two other divisions of Creative Commons also engage in specialized work: ccLearn((.link_green)) for open educational resources and Science Commons((.link_green)) for open access to science.

New Creative Commons Protocols

In addition to the six licenses, Creative Commons has recently developed two new protocols: CC+ and CC0.

CC+ (CC “Plus”) is not a license but a technology for offering users rights beyond the CC license grant -- for instance commercial rights -- or additional warranties.

CC0 (CC “Zero”) is a universal waiver of copyright, neighboring and related rights, and sui generis rights. CC0 thus enables authors to place their works in the public domain. CC0 is sometimes known as the “no rights reserved” option. Under the laws of certain countries, however, it is not possible for an author to grant a blanket waiver of his or her moral rights. Nor can an author waive the rights that others may have relating to the use of a work (for example, the publicity rights that the subject of a photograph may have).

A possible implementation model for digital libraries would be to propose a combination of:

  • CC licenses for works created by librarians: abstracts, comments, photographs, maps, other copyrightable elements of the editorial structure;
  • CC licenses for works created by patrons: comments, abstracts, critics, blog posts;
  • CC0 licenses for databases of public domain works to which the libraries have added potentially copyrightable material.

Implications for Authors and for Users

Authors considering applying Creative Commons licenses to their creations should consider the following issues:

The licenses are based on copyright law, and are thus applicable only to copyrightable works.

In many countries, collecting societies require their members to assign all of their rights in present and future works to the societies. Thus, members cannot use Creative Commons licenses, even for some of their works or some of their rights.

Many authors do not understand why the two systems are not compatible, especially in the music industry. They would like to license their non-commercial rights for free under a Creative Commons license and assign the management of their commercial rights to a collecting society. This model is possible for some collecting societies in some countries, such as the United States, the Netherlands or Denmark. But other collecting societies do not use the same legal categories as Creative Commons. For instance, they may not recognize the distinction between commercial and non-commercial uses. In those countries, authors are currently forced to choose one system or the other.

Creative Commons staff and international affiliates have been working with collecting societies in hopes of resolving this incompatibility. Unfortunately, some collecting societies and other copyright stakeholders are skeptical of Creative Commons licenses and are thus reluctant to move forward. Their criticisms of the Creative Commons model include:

  • The Creative Commons system does not provide creators a way to collect money; creators thus must organize for themselves a way to charge for activities that fall outside the CC license terms.
  • Creative Commons does not track infringements and is not authorized to represent licensors in lawsuits or help them enforce the licenses.
  • Creative Commons licenses are non-revocable, and the license grant is perpetual. Authors who employ CC licenses thus cannot later change their minds. They can, of course, cease distributing the works or distribute them under different conditions, but this will not affect the rights associated with the copies that are already in circulation.
  • Determining what does and does not constitute a commercial use is a difficult question, and answers may vary among individuals and user communities.
  • It is questionable whether jurisdiction-specific licenses, which have been adapted to national legal systems, are really compatible with each other. For instance, some versions of the CC licenses include moral rights or database rights; others do not.

The Open Access movement

The Open Access (OA) movement seeks to increase the public availability of works of scholarship. It was provoked by a rapid rise in the price of scientific journals, forcing many libraries to cancel journal subscriptions. The movement claims that authors should be able to access freely their colleagues’ research for the benefit of science and the general public.

OA journals offer articles to the public online for free. They often use very open online licenses, such as the Creative Commons Attribution license. This strategy is sometimes known as “Gold Open Access.” Because they forgo traditional sources of revenue, OA journals must devise alternative business models. Some charge authors for publication of their work. Others rely entirely the work of volunteers.

Some journals are not OA journals, but authorize the authors of the articles they publish to archive versions of their articles in institutional repositories set up by their universities. This strategy is sometimes called “Green Open Access.” Some Green Open Access journals also allow authors to upload their work to free, discipline-specific public repositories, like the Social Science Research Network. Journal copyright policies regarding self-archiving are analyzed by the project Sherpa RoMEO((.link_green)). More than 50% of pay-journal policies allow their authors to archive their pre-print articles in open access repositories.

Some journals do not generally allow authors to host open-copies of their articles on their own websites. In these situations, authors may formally request that the publishing contract allow them to do so. Several addendum models are available. "SCAE," the Science Commons Scholars’ Copyright Addendum Engine generates one such form.

Funding institutions can facilitate or compel the use of one or more of these strategies by encouraging or requiring grant recipients to make the fruits of their projects publicly available. Currently, the National Institutes of Health in the United States, the European Research Council, and the Wellcome Trust in the United Kingdom require their grantees to make their work publicly accessible.

Universities can also help. Harvard University has led the way on this issue. Starting in 2008, some schools within Harvard have required faculty members to provide the university with a non-exclusive, irrevocable, worldwide license to distribute their scholarly articles for non-commercial uses. However, a faculty member may override this default rule by obtaining a waiver for a specific article.


Casestudy.pngBack to the case study

Angela complains to Nadia that she cannot include in her course pack the article from a colleague because he transferred his rights to the publisher. Nadia informs Angela that some publishers have very strict policies, but that sometimes publishing contracts are in fact less restrictive than some authors may think. Together, they will search for the journal policy to see whether the article could be included.

Together, they will browse Sherpa RoMEO because it “provides a listing of publishers' copyright conditions as they relate to authors archiving their work on-line.”

Finally, Nadia will suggest to Angela that, together, they provide the colleague information concerning Creative Commons, Open Access, and other systems that have been developed recently that might enable the colleague in the future to ensure that access to his scholarship is more open.

Resource.png Additional resources

An extensive set of teaching materials on Free and Open Source Software can be found at the course website for The Internet: Issues at the Frontier((.link_red)).

Other valuable resources on free software include:

The main website for Creative Commons is http://creativecommons.org/((.link_red))

A large repository of photographs available under Creative Commons licenses is available through Flickr

A thorough discussion, prepared in 2007 by Peter Suber, of the various dimensions of the Open Access Movement can be found at the Open Access Overview((.link_green))

The most important document in the OA Movement is the Budapest Open Access Initiative. Its history and impact are discussed on the website of the Soros Foundation((.link_red))

A Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) can be found here((.link_green))

A sampler of Open Access Journals in the Health Sciences:

Cases

The following judicial opinions explore and apply some of the principles discussed in this module:

Curry v. Weekend (District Court of Amsterdam, March 9, 2006)((.link_red)) (Creative Commons license)

GPL-Violations.org v. D-Link (District Court of Frankfurt 2006)((.link_green))

Jacobsen v. Katzer, 535 F.3d 1373 (CAFC 2008)((.link_red)) (Open Source Licenses)

Question.png Assignment and discussion questions

Assignment.pngAssignment

Choose one of the following:

Question 1. Creative Commons currently supports the licensing of creative works in 52 countries. If your country is one of these, use search engines and other directories to locate some documents available under CC licenses that you could help promote and re-distribute.

Question 2. Determine if there are any OA journals published in your country. Make a list suitable for distribution to your patrons.

Question 3. Prepare slides or a one-page handout that you could use to educate librarians and academics concerning the Creative Commons system and OA options. Publish your document online with the Creative Commons license of your choice and send the link to the group. If your library doesn’t have a website, you may use SlideShare.

Question 4. How would you design and implement an OA policy in your country?

Discussion.pngDiscussion Question(s)

Comment on strategies proposed by your colleagues in response to question 4.

Contributors

This module was created by Melanie Dulong de Rosnay. It was then edited by a team including Sebastian Diaz, William Fisher, Urs Gasser, Adam Holland, Kimberley Isbell, Peter Jaszi, Colin Maclay, Andrew Moshirnia, and Chris Peterson.

Home

Introduction

Course Materials:

The Rotisserie