tomislav medak on Fri, 23 Apr 2004 23:46:05 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
[nettime-see] alternativne licence za autorska djela iCommons :: poziv na javnuraspravu |
iCommons Hrvatska - javna rasprava o prijedlogu alternativnih licenci za autorska djela (please scroll down for english version!) obaviještavamo Vas da su Creative Commons iz Palo Alta (US) i Multimedijalni institut iz Zagreba (HR) započeli proces prilagođavanja Creative Commons javnih licenci za autorska djela u hrvatski jezik i hrvatski pravni sustav. Stoga Vas pozivamo da sudjelujete u javnoj raspravi o prvom prijedlogu hrvatskog pravnog teksta najobuhvatnije licence (imenovanje - nekomercijalno - dijeli pod istim uvjetima) na temelju koje će biti prilagođene i sve ostale licence. Prijedlog licence možete naći na sljedećim adresama: http://creativecommons.org/projects/international/hr/ ili http://tamtam.mi2.hr/cc/PrijedlogLicence a svoje priloge javnoj raspravi možete slati pretplatom na mailing listu CC-HR: http://lists.ibiblio.org/mailman/listinfo/cc-hr (e-mail adresa: cc-hr@lists.ibiblio.org) ili postaviti u vidu komentara na: http://tamtam.mi2.hr/cc/PrijedlogLicence/PrijedLogLicence +++ Što su Creative Commons licence? Creative Commons licence prvo su obuhvatno i jednostavno alternativno rješenje za licenciranje autorskih djela. One omogućuju stvaraocima da svoja djela objave pod drugačijim uvjetima od standardnih, restriktivnih uvjeta autorskog prava i učine ih dostupnima korisnicima s više sloboda za korištenje, daljnje stvaranje i razmjenjivanje. Poput GNU Opće javne licence za slobodni softver, one imaju za cilj proširiti prostor slobodnog stvaralaštva, njegovu razmjenu i njegovu dostupnost u javnoj domeni, ali za različite stvaralačke sadržaje: muziku, fotografiju, film, video, književnost, dizajn,... Kako licencirati djelo? Da bi spriječio da njegovo djelo automatski bude objavljeno pod standardnim licencnim uvjetima autorskog prava, autor treba izrijekom navesti uvjete pod kojima daje svoje djelo na korištenje. To je nešto čega u večini slučajeva autori nisu svjesni. A kad i jesu, procedura i sprovođenje takvog izbora predstavlja dodatan napor na kojeg autori često nisu spremni. Creative Commons pojednostavljuje taj postupak tako da autor pomoću web sučelja može izabrati uvjete pod kojima objavljuje svoje djelo i za uzvrat dobiti licencu koja poštiva odabrane uvjete, koja je usklađena s pozitivnim pravnim propisima i koja je obranjiva pred sudom u slučaju spora. Licencu autor dobiva u tri oblika: 1. u obliku pravnog teksta, 2. u obliku sažetka i 3. u mašinski čitljivom obliku. Autor pritom i registrira svoje djelo, čime ono postaje lakše dostupno korisnicima u potrazi za slobodnim sadržajima. Zašto odabrati Creative Commons licencu? Da biste mogli ostvariti svoje pravo da određujete uvjete korištenja i razmjene svojih djela. Da biste imali odgovarajuću licencu za svoja djela. Da bi djela pod alternativnim licencama bila dostupnija i vidljivija. Da bi se širio prostor za slobodno stvaralaštvo i njegovu dostupnost u javnoj domeni u vremenima kada režimi intelektualnog vlasništva nošeni razvojem informatičko-komunikacijskih tehnologija i industrija čine taj prostor restriktivnijim i ograničenijim.... Što je iCommons? iCommons, odnosno International Commons, je projekt prilagodbe Creative Commons javnih licenci u različite jezike i različita nacionalna zakonodavstva o autorskom pravu, budući da su Creative Commons licence izvorno temeljene na pozitivnim propisima o copyrightu SAD-a. Trenutno je, pored hrvatskog, u tijeku daljnjih 1o iCommons projekata prilagodbe licenci u zakonodavstva sljedećih zemalja ili regija: Brazil, Katalonija, Kina, Finska, Francuska, Irska, Italija, Japan, Španjolska, Tajvan i Velika Britanija. +++ Podrobnije informacije o Creative Commons možete naći na sljedećoj adresi: http://creativecommons.org/ Podrobnije informacije o iCommons projektu možete naći na sljedećoj adresi: http://creativecommons.org/projects/international/ Podrobnije o hrvatskom iCommons projektu možete naći na sljedećim adresama: http://creativecommons.org/projects/international/hr ili http://tamtam.mi2.hr/cc/ +++ Ako trebate daljnje informacije, obratite se voditeljima projekta: Christiane Asschenfeldt (Berlin) iCommons koordinator, Creative Commons christiane@creativecommons.org Diana Kovačević Remenarić, (Zagreb) suvoditelj projekta, iCommons Croatia diana@mi2.hr Tomislav Medak, (Zagreb) suvoditelj projekta, iCommons Croatia to-me@mi2.hr [U dodatku ovome mailu šaljemo i službeni press release povodom pokretanja hrvatskog iCommons projekta.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- iCommons Croatia - public discussion of a proposal for alternative licenses for creative works We wish to inform you that the Multimedia Institute from Zagreb (HR) and Creative Commons from Palo Alto (US) have started with the process of implementing the Creative Commons public licenses into Croatian language and Croatian jurisdiction. Therefore, we invite you to participate in the public discussion of a first draft of the legal code of the most extensive license (Attribution - Non-commercial - Share Alike) that will serve as a basis for implementation of all other licenses. The license draft can be found at the following address: http://creativecommons.org/projects/international/hr/ or http://tamtam.mi2.hr/cc/PrijedlogLicence and your contributions to the public discussion you can send by subscribing to the CC-HR mailing list: http://lists.ibiblio.org/mailman/listinfo/cc-hr (e-mail address: cc-hr@lists.ibiblio.org) or in the form of a comment at: http://tamtam.mi2.hr/cc/PrijedlogLicence/PrijedLogLicence +++ What are Creative Commons licenses? Creative Commons licenses are the first comprehensive and easy-to-use solution for licensing creative works. They allow creators to publish their works under terms different to the standard, restrictive terms of copyright and make them available to the users with more freedoms to use, to build upon them and to share them. Like the GNU General Public License for free software, they are aimed at expanding the free creativity, its sharing and its accessibility in the public domain, but for various types of creative content: music, photography, film, video, literature, design,... How to license a work? To prevent her work to be automatically published under the standard licensing terms of copyright, the author is required to expressedly state the terms under which she wishes to make her work available for use. This is something that mostly authors are not aware of. And if they are, the procedure and enforcement of that choice presents too great of an effort that authors are often not willing to invest. The Creative Commons makes this procedure simple by allowing the author to chose by means of a web interface the terms she wishes to publish her work under, and to get in turn a license that abides to the chosen terms, that is harmonized with the Croatian legislation and that can stand in the court of law in the case of a dispute. Author receives the license in three formats: 1. legal code, 2. human readable summary, and 3. machine readable format. Alongside choosing a license, the author also registers her work making it thus more easily accessible to users in search of free content. Why chose a Creative Commons license? So that you could implement your right to set the terms of use and sharing for your works. So that you could have an adequate license for your works. So that the works under alternative licenses could be more accessible and visible. So that the free creativity, its availability in the public domain could expand at times when the intellectual property regimes, propelled by the development of information and communication technologies and industries, make this space more restricted and confined... What is iCommons? iCommons, or International Commons, is the project of implementing the Creative Commons public licenses into various languages and national jurisdictions, as the Creative Commons licenses are originally based on the U.S. copyright legislation. Alongside the Croatian, there are currently 11 further iCommons projects implementing the licenses into the jurisdictions of following countries or regions: Brazil, Catalonia, China, Finland, France, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Spain, Taiwan and United Kingdom. +++ Detailed information about the Creative Commons can be found at the following address: http://creativecommons.org/ Detailed information about the iCommons can be found at the following address: http://creativecommons.org/projects/international/ Detailed information on the iCommons Croatia can be found at the following address: http://creativecommons.org/projects/international/hr or http://tamtam.mi2.hr/cc/ +++ For any further information, please contact the project coordination: Christiane Asschenfeldt (Berlin) iCommons Coordinator, Creative Commons christiane@creativecommons.org Diana Kovačević Remenarić, (Zagreb) Co-Project Lead, iCommons Croatia diana@mi2.hr Tomislav Medak, (Zagreb) Co-Project Lead iCommons Croatia to-me@mi2.hr [Appended to this email you will find the official press release on the release of iCommons Croatia.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Press release, February 24, 2004 Multimedia Institute (mi2) will lead the license translation and work to expand global access to Croatia's culture Palo Alto, USA, and Zagreb, CROATIA - Creative Commons, a nonprofit dedicated to building a body of creative works free for copying and re-use, announced today that it would expand its International Commons (iCommons) project to Croatia. Multimedia Institute (mi2), in Zagreb, will lead the effort. "Croatia has already demonstrated an extraordinary range of creative use of new technology," said Lawrence Lessig, Chairman of Creative Commons and professor of law at Stanford. "We're eager to work with iCommons Croatia to support that work." "It's liberating for Croatia to participate in this global effort to create a common space for creativity, especially at a time when legislative regimes often overlook this public good," said Diana Kovacevic, project lead. First announced in March 2003, iCommons is Creative Commons' project to make its machine-readable copyright licenses useful worldwide. As the lead institution, (mi2) will coordinate a public effort literally and legally to translate the Creative Commons licenses for use in Croatia. (mi2) will field comments on an archived email discussion at the Creative Commons website, http://www.creativecommons.org/discuss#croatia. Croatia joins Brazil, China, Finland, France, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Taiwan and the United Kingdom in the iCommons effort. More About Creative Commons A nonprofit corporation, Creative Commons promotes the creative re-use of intellectual works, whether owned or in the public domain. It is sustained by the generous support of The Center for the Public Domain, the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, and the Hewlett Foundation. Creative Commons is based at Stanford Law School, where it shares staff, space, and inspiration with the school's Center for Internet and Society. For general information, visit http://creativecommons.org/. For more information about iCommons, see http://creativecommons.org/projects/international/. More About Multimedia Institute (mi2) (mi2) sprang up in 1999 as a spin-off of the Internet program of Open Society Institute Croatia. Entering locally uncharted territory between social and cultural action and new technological developments, (mi2) brought together an emerging generation of civil activists, media practitioners, urban culture actors and social and media theorists who set out to pursue two principle tasks: 1) To promote and educate in media and technological practices relevant for the functioning and development of a social and cultural sector, and 2) To promote and develop socially inflected approaches to new technologies, especially as investments in the local emerging market gradually increased the penetration of new media and introduced the domination of commercial standards. Over the past two years, (mi2) has become increasingly involved in cooperative activities at the local, regional and international levels to strengthen the cultural scene and advocate on behalf of the public domain. It is working towards initiating structural changes in a wide range of areas, including: non-institutional culture, informal education, technology, intellectual property rights, and access to public resources. For more information about (mi2), visit http://www.mi2.hr/. ............................................... Nettime-SEE mailing list Nettime-SEE@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-see