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Al Jazeera Releases Egypt Coverage Under Creative Commons (UPDATED)

By Curt Hopkins / January 28, 2011 1:01 PM / View Comments

alj.jpgQatar-based news service Al Jazeera has a long relationship with Creative Commons licensing. Now, for its coverage of the Egyptian uprising, it has released photographs via Flickr and video on a CC license.

Available photographs and video are available for free use so long as the user gives attribution and does not alter the products. For the record, all the photographs and video in this post are from Al Jazeera.

Google Books Offers Creative Commons Licensing

By Dana Oshiro / August 13, 2009 5:31 PM / View Comments

creativecommons_google_sug09a.jpgEarlier this morning Google Books announced a program where rights owners would be given the option to modify their copyright licenses and specify them as Creative Commons (CC) works. The initiative allows writers, artists and publishers to mark their books with one of 6 CC version 3 licenses, a public domain license or the CC "no rights reserved" license.

Jimmy Wales Joins Open Textbook Organization

By Dana Oshiro / July 21, 2009 9:47 AM / View Comments

wales_wikipedia_jul09.jpgWikipedia and Wikia co-founder Jimmy Wales has just joined the advisory board of CK-12 Foundation - a nonprofit organization that provides standards-aligned online textbooks to kindergarten to grade 12 students. One key element of the organization includes offering "FlexBooks" - a product that allows educators and students to create and edit their own open-content teaching materials. Users can add chapters to existing texts or create completely new material using the Flexr tool.

Creative Commons on Flickr: Users Prefer Restrictive Licenses

By Frederic Lardinois / March 26, 2009 11:56 AM / View Comments

cc_flickr_logo_mar09.pngFlickr now holds the world's largest repository of Creative Commons-licensed images, but according to a new study, most Flickr users opt to license their images under the most restrictive CC license. Also, only a relatively small number of users (24%) allow commercial use of their images, and only about 12% of users choose the BY license, which allows for free sharing and remixing, as long as the author is attributed.

CC Zero: A New Tool to Push Your Work Immediately Into the Public Domain

By Marshall Kirkpatrick / March 11, 2009 8:29 AM / View Comments

Did you know that written, scientific or artistic content you create is automatically put under copyright protection under US law - whether you want it to be copyrighted or not? That's not good for a culture of collaboration and building on each others' work - quite the opposite in fact.

Today, the Creative Commons Foundation is announcing a new tool called CC Zero. CC Zero isn't another legal license from the group, instead it's a legal tool that lets content creators give up the rights claims they are given by default and instead send their work into the public domain.

EFF, Creative Commons Offer Developers Free Access to 2m Pages of Legal Documents

By Marshall Kirkpatrick / February 11, 2008 6:03 PM

Creative Commons announced tonight that in partnership with Public.Resource.Org and with legal representation from the Electronic Frontier Foundation, it has purchased and has now made available at no charge the equivalent of nearly two million pages of legal documents. If printed and piled on top of each other, the documents would make a stack of books 348 feet tall. Included are all U.S. Supreme Court decisions and all Courts of Appeals decisions from 1950 on.

Though these texts have always technically been in the public domain, the organizations had to purchase the electronic version from a private company that had compiled it. Now available at this link, they have also been converted to XHMTL so that anyone can develop user interfaces and search engines against the information.

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