Lessig Proposes "Creative Commons"
cmuncey writes: "Lawrence Lessig's newest effort is profiled this morning in a SFGate.com article this morning. Creative Commons will offer customizable flexible intellectual property licenses that can be used by artists, writers, and others in moving their works from copyright to public domain in a controlled manner. The aricle also cites plans to create a 'conservancy' for what looks like orphanware. This is a joint work of Lessig and people from MIT, Duke, Harvard and Villanova."
Hopefully they are more creative in their work than their web site.
-- Powered By Linux
There's an .pdf article with some interesting ideas linked to this at Lessig's site - Reclaiming a Commons
What do you have to offer us to:
- pay us for what you want--it must have value since you want it in the public domain, and it's our duty to extract that value for our shareholders.
- protect us from liability should anyone manage to damage themselves or their own companies with the product you want us to give away.
Unfortunately, there aren't easy answers to those objections. The answer isn't some kind of volunatry feel-good way to have corporations give to the public domain, because it's not going to happen. The answer is to make copyright for a "limited time," as the framers intended. Not for 95 years when 5 years is an eternity in <cliche>Internet time<cliche>.
One CPU cycle wasted on digital restrictions management is ONE TOO MANY.
I am certain that in today's Bush-inspired economic downturn, plenty of people will be willing to donate their hard work to the public domain instead of using it to put food on their table.
</sarcasm>
But this is irrelevent, since the concept of public domain only applies to software if the source is available (not the law as it currently stands; the law completely ignores this). How can 10 year old software still be useful if it doesn't run on any current systems, and cannot be ported to a new one?
According to the RIAA and MPAA, all copyrighted material is public domain thanks to evil hax0ring devices like Napster, Morpheus, and Usenet.
sorry to be the skepitical one, here but this has been done before and trouble has been brewing ever since
Isn't part of copyright control the right to release of said control? This makes it easy to precisely define what can and can't be done. Sometimes people want full protection, while others don't mind some other uses.
I'm not afraid of falling, it's the sudden stop at the end that frightens me.
What is their motivation for changing their licensing?? You can argue that a flexible license would reduce piracy, but frankly these compaies are already doing a good job of shutting down major piracy services. I just don't see any motivation for change.
IF I am, it seems that these licenses will not have been tested in court. So how useful are they? Will you put your exciting Foo Application in the Commons, only to see BigSoftCorp take it when the license is proved invalid by a technicality?
Not to mention, will the OSF feel the need to approve or dis-approve every single possible combination?
I bet they'll be paying particular attention to creating fine print that says, "use our licenses at your own risk."
"We're sorry, but the website you're trying to reach has been disconnected."
A consistent set of licenses that cover the objectives of GPL, LGPL, Berkely, Artistic, etc. and other points on the spectrum to fully commercial would be a great benefit to us all.
pay us for what you want--it must have value since you want it in the public domain, and it's our duty to extract that value for our shareholders.
The problem with this argument... and the fallacy that so many corporate types fall for is that value is not an absolute.
Case in point... I am a PC owner who has aquired a Motorola processor for an older Mac. I *could* spend my money and try to build a system around that processor, but I'd rather spend it on a newer system with with an AMD processor.
I could try to sell it to a mac-owner, but most Mac ownwers are used to spending a little more on hardware than PC owners. Most probably will never have a use for my processor.
The one person who does have a use for my processor is the poor kid who's managed to scrounge, beg, and borrow all the parts necessary to build a Macintosh Quadra-era PC, but lacks a processor to make it run. (This exmple may be flawed...)
The point is, the processor only has value to someone who can't afford to buy it. It doesn't have value to anyone who could afford to buy it because they can already afford better, just because the tech has advanced so far so quickly.
The same is true of 'orphanware' and 'abandonware'. I would never seriously consider paying to have a Donkey Kong arcade machine. It's old, clunky, and probably smells of whatever bar or grease-pit it's been rotting in for the last 2 decades. I highly doubt that Midway has sold any to anyone but the most rabid of collectors in at least a decade.
To download the rom for free, (and illegally), gives me a great deal of satisfaction playing a old, great game I would not otherwise ever engage in.
While the hardware and software combination may have a small amount of value to collectors, the software itself has no value at all, except to those who wouldn't have it unless they could get it for free.
The next Slashdot story will be ready soon, but subscribers can beat the rush and slashdot the links early!
What's the effigy for? They some witch family or something?
OHH I get it . Tehehe.
{to burn} or {to hang} in {in effigy} an image or picture of a person, as a token of public odium. Damn elite dict.
odium means { hate coupled with disgust } .
Good trolling there.
Also, the idea behind the availability of standard licenses helping to make rather "open" IP acceptable to Business is greatly overblown. Business doesn't reject open information because it doesn't like the licenses; it rejects it because the owners don't have deep enough pockets to make worthwhile the suing of the open-licensors if the open-licensors have included infringed information in the works they are claiming to license. This puts the business on the hook for infringement suits which can't effectively be passed on to the responsible party. Even more important is that the typical open-licensor doesn't have nearly the incentive to publish lawsuit-free works since they don't have nearly the fear of lawsuits that the typical closed-licensing business does, making the latter a much less risky party to engage in licensing deals with.
If you haven't read it already, check out Lessig's ten questions from December.
Will y'all quit trotting out this communist crap over and over and over. The damn bolsheviks kept thinking they was all smart and doing this for the greater good, and they just knew they had it all figured out.....
And it ended up being a blatant power grab. Just like this Free Blah Open Blah Shared Blah will end up (is ending up, if you just open your eyes).
There already are a number of free licenses in use. It's hard to tell from this plan, but does he intend to just ignore these licenses? What about all the works already published with them? And it sounds like this could turn into a sloppy mess if you let people select options to make a "custom license" - I mean, what about compatibility? If everybody's got their own license, you can't combine anything anymore! Or is he saying that the licenses and methods currently being put to use just aren't good enough? Will he make a Foundation like FSF but for music or other things?
So these are big red flags that sprang to mind upon my initial reading. It sounds too much like a PR stunt, trying to reinvent the wheel. If Lessig works with the others, well OK. But if it ignores existing work, I would not trust it. The point is that people should work together, not try to out do one another. (Did the FSF do this too?)
Also I noticed his two published books are not public domain, open source, free, or copyleft. What's up with that? Again, what is the motive? Why not walk the walk you talk??
(Please mod up, I'm anon this post...)
The other question is, if their license-du-jour you create online doesn't stand up in court
Well then, the product would revert to standard copyright, by which no one but the author has any right to do anything with it. Any type of license other than standard copyright is a way of specifying what rights the purchaser/liscensor has to a product. By default, no one but the author has any rights.
Nope, no sig
IANAL, but if you didn't register the copyright, you have a harder time proving your case that it's your IP. Some people might use Creative Commons exclusively without registering a copyright, thereby NOT having a registered copyright to fall back on.
"We're sorry, but the website you're trying to reach has been disconnected."
protect us from liability should anyone manage to damage themselves or their own companies with the product you want us to give away.
The fact that our current legal system does nothing to discourage frivolous lawsuits is the real problem here. I agree that it will be raised, and that it is a fact of life. But that's not a problem with copyright law, it's a problem with tort law.
Nope, no sig
A "conservancy for what looks like orphanware"?
Remind anyone else of the data haven from Cryptonomicon, by Neal Stephenson?
Why make future generations suffer ?
So the poor, Starving Artist picks out the Creative Commons license that meets her need. For the moment, assume the license is ironclad. Then, mean old Megacorp comes along and steals Starving Artist's work. How is she going to enforce her license? Will Creative Commons maintain a staff of lawyers to work license infringment cases pro-bono? Do we trust that lawyers will take these cases on a contingency fee basis?
Unless there's some answer, the license won't mean much. Lessig is a very smart guy. It will be interesting to see his full proposal on how he expects this to work.
I don't mean to flame, but I think he's in denial. It does not look at what's going on from a pragmatic point of view. There are people out there who actually think that leveraging intellectual properties to their extremes are what the internet and the information age is all about. (Sort of aken to the days of those who thought that the industrial revolution was all about leveraging inventions like the cotton-gyn to extend their plantations to be thousands of times bigger) They were/are simply so dilusioned that we can almost be assured that there will be no compromizing till the bitter end.
As long as this attitude is in place we will continue to have DMCA pushers, and they will not back off on their irrational demands that all information be treated like peoperty. To come back with an attitude of compromize is pitifull. The only honest solution is defiance and civil disobedience of copyrights till people start to get it and can no longer afford to keep shoving irrational demands down our throats.
I happen to know that Lessing does not like this approach because he contends that it's extreme and that it won't get sympathy because it's "harmfull" to artists, but no one ever seems to look at the down-side of copyrights or they just assume on faith that it's less than the up-side. Well it's not about sympathy, society will come arround when the media runs out of money. It's about freedom, and how I have a moral right to apply it to my and other's benefit even if a copyright holder does not like that. There is no reason why people shouldn't act this way, and now with the internet they have the power to without having to get token permission or to purchase token licenses.
This is far more respective of creators then the copyright lords have ever been to them or us.
Then come back and see if you still have a question.
no, capitalism doesn't stink, it just smells funny
VA, owner of OSDN, is losing a whopping $11.00 per share.
So, I'm not sure what "slovent" means but it certainly isn't the same as "solvent".
One of the central points behind Tragedy of the Commons is that given a finite supply of grazing grounds and a competitive environment of farmers grazing on these grounds, an incentive to overgraze is built into the system. Thus the commons for all are destroyed as each farmer maximizes his "share" of the commons to everyone else's detriment. Hardin's essay leaves out the potential for ad-hoc agreement between competing farmers to limit over-use of the commons (without privatization). But most importantly it doesn't even consider the potential for a limitless commons -- that is, one in which the supply in commons is not finite.
This is where Tragedy of the Commons breaks down, Lessig says in The Future of Ideas, his latest work. As Lessig points out, it's a logical fallacy to use Tragedy of the Commons as an analogy to further certain intellectual property rights since there is no limit to the number of times some kinds of IP can be duplicated and distributed. Being a physical object, grass in a commons is in finite supply and subject to the potential for overgrazing. But without artificial barriers (such as copy protection technology) how can one ever over consume to scarcity the supply of digital data such as a software program?
Interesting book.
Cheers,
--Maynard
Even if the old software on the whole is totally unusable in any current known context, it's source pieces within may reveal a lot of great ideas that can be reused in modern works of software. Just because an idea is old doesn't make it bad.
Steve Magruder, Metro Foodist
One of Free Software's main benefits and main cause of success is the moral reward, the feeling of doing a good to the community.
This kind of licenses can bring to general creative work these perceived benefits. Authors of poetry, music, books, scientific investigation, whatever, may release their work as a gift to humanity. This would give them public acknowledgement and gratitude while assuring their right to control the content donated.
Public may be able to appreciate these values and want them as a good in itself. If you believe in market laws, soon it would become an extra advantage for a comercial product the fact of being released with a permisive license. This is right now happening in the software domain.
I wonder what the effect of automatic control of licenses might be. We have all being scared with news about DMCA embedding in hardware the control of not copyrighted material reproduction.
But if this control is developed for real author (not editor) protection, with the license being a running program? Well developed-debugged licenses would be an extra tempt for artistic products, and record companies would try to keep a work well done. Everyone in the industry take profit of this model of release.
Singularity: a belief in the "God" idea with the "demiurge" relation inverted.
These kind of intelectual rights are enforced by author coalitions. The problem is, the coalition tends to become a lobby wich mainly defends the rights of the record companies instead of their real obligation. But this shouldn't happen if instead of a coffee-for-all boilerplate each author could enforce her own prerequisits.
Singularity: a belief in the "God" idea with the "demiurge" relation inverted.
As I mention in my other comment, the main use of these model is not in software, but in artistic/scientific material.
Referring to soft licenses, it would be like re-engineering the actual ones to their basic components and let you choose wich ones want to use. This work extends the meaning of the GPL/BSD/Artistic/others licenses, not restrict them. You could easily redo a GPL-like legal license with say, obligation to say "don't spit" in every source file.
With a well developed interface for the modules, you should not have problems of deciding whether a chosen pair of licenses may or may not interact. But this is only a problem with rewritable/pluggable material, wich is often not the case with music or literature!
Singularity: a belief in the "God" idea with the "demiurge" relation inverted.
I totally agree with that which is why the "copyright commons" project is so crazy. I envision millions of individual copyright holders nickeling and diming each other to death with a variety of specialized licenses and rules to the point that everybody is rendered incapable using the information they have right before them. By doing this he practically creates a tragedy of the commons where there was none before - or did I miss something?
Through Creative Commons, Lessig (among others) will provide a set of licenses which allow a gradation of freedoms and restrictions for copyright holders and consumers alike. Yes, as stated in the article it's likely that some of the licenses would not meet OSI license requirements as "open source", never mind "Free" under rms's definition. However, they will provide a medium ground between a completely restrictive license as defined under DMCA provisions and a completely open license under OSI or gnu guidelines. Lessig has repeatedly stated that he is not inherently against copyright, but he does oppose the use (abuse) of copyright law to further limit use of copyrighted goods beyond duplication rights. While I can't speak for Lessig, I assume that he at his cohorts will attempt to craft licenses which balance the rights of copyright holders to limit commercial duplication against the rights of consumers for "fair use" personal duplication and reverse engineering.
Cheers,
--Maynard
A straightforward and cheap way to enforce copyright for unrepresented authors is to simply seal a copy of your manuscript in a manila envelope and post it to yourself. The PO will gladly paper-seal the envelope and frank the seal. When you sue in civil court ($20 fee hereabouts, couple hundred for the papers to be served) you bring your still sealed envelope and hand it to the judge. This is not going to be much help if one needs to prove ideas stolen and modified, but is sufficient to get any number of simple rip-offs detained, no matter how expensive the defendant's suits are. Check out the Nolo Press. The law is full of obfuscation and chicanery, but eventually slams up against the truth. A contingent truth, sometimes unjust, often misinformed, but the truth by its lights. You don't need a thousand dollar suit to participate.
I would never seriously consider paying to have a Donkey Kong arcade machine. It's old, clunky, and probably smells of whatever bar or grease-pit it's been rotting in for the last 2 decades.
A new display and cabinet would fix that.
To download the rom for free, (and illegally), gives me a great deal of satisfaction playing a old, great game I would not otherwise ever engage in.
So would buying a legit copy of the software for ten bucks at Amazon and playing it on your Game Boy.
However, I don't think it should be wrong to connect a cartridge dumper to your computer and play games of which you own a legitimate copy through an emulator, no matter what Nintendo says.
Will I retire or break 10K?
...but I *love* this analogy:
I see profit as comparable to breath. You have to breathe to stay alive, but that doesn't mean you were put on Earth for the sole purpose of breathing.
Excellent...
I am just dying to set up my own version of the Creative Commons, using their content, the source code from their web site, etc. (Well, maybe not the source code from their web site, at least not until they put up something worth stealing.)
The thing that kills me about Lessig is, however he rails against the evils copyright and the virtues of the commons, I end up having to shell out $25 each time I want to read his book. And I have not yet seen him webcast his lectures which, if true to the form of most law school classes, cost about as much as a broadway show to attend.
Remember Phil Greenspun (of photo.net)? He wrote a book about designing web pages that was just fantastic. He charged more than $30 for the book, but he filled it with some great photography, so that it would be a coffee table book for those who purchased it. Then he went ahead and put the entire text of the book on the Internet, so that those who did not want to buy it could just browse it gratis. THAT's somebody who practices what he preaches about open source.
I ended up buying Greenspun's book. His stand made it well worth the thirty bucks, and the pictures make the book worth having around.
By no means does Creative Commons wish to give up the fight to extend the public domain by limiting copyright term.
The supporters of infinite copyright term argue that works have some value forever and thus should be protected. We don't actually believe this argument--but if the works have value then there is some merit in granting tax deductions for donating them to the public. That may be another campaign by Creative Commons--stay tuned.
Lessig's and my case against the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act is on appeal to the Supreme Court--see http://openlaw.org/eldredvreno
Look at me! I'm Larry Lessig!! I'm important!!!
No you're not.
Finally, an opportunity to burn some Karma and harp yet again on Slashdot's obsession with Lessig.
For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
Will Creative Commons maintain a staff of lawyers to work license infringment cases pro-bono?
Be careful! If you use the term "pro bono" instead of "for free," you appear to support the 95-plus year copyright term granted by the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act. (No U2 jokes please.)
Will I retire or break 10K?
In the threads of this article, I've noticed alot of people saying the same thing - so I decided to respond here rather than to each one individually.
Man, how can I explain to people that the problem is copyrights and allowing any restriction on copying at all is a bad thing. God help me, but here it goes, just hear me out.....
About 400 years ago there was an innocent little practice in America called indentured servitude. It was for blacks and whites, it couldn't be inherited, and anybody could gain their own freedom and property after a few years work. It sounded like a good deal, but unfortunately this was but a seed for a vine whose growth we could not controll that led to ever increasing restrictions and abuse that eventually led to a bloody civil war and countless years worth of damage to the people who were caught in the slave culture.
Well the same is true with copyrights of even the smallest imposition. They are a seed who'se ultimate growth can only destroy us and the freedoms we value. In fact we can already clearly see it happening with their massive extensions, and the freedom of speech and the DMCA. The people who say "well, a little bit of copyrights are ok" I must admit sound pretty rational, but just don't get it. Dammit, I don't want to go through this just to pass the same bullshit down to my children. If we ever want to move on, we simply half to wipe the entire concept that it's ok to derive benefit by restricting the copying practices of others - period. For God's sake, how much of our freedom of speech is going to go to hell before people get it!
One more thing, it is bad enough that we have that seed planted and growing here, but that we are trying to plant it in other countries like China is unforgiveable. They do not have a government with checks and balances, and do not have a culture of freedom to protect them from the same pressures that we are suffering under now. What will happen when it becomes their turn, when trillions of dollars are at stake in their country, when enforcement goes unchecked? I really don't think people are thinking through the consequences of our copyright attitudes. Dammit, I hate this attitude people have about copyrights - please, just let it go.
After reading the SFGATE.COM article about the Creative Commons, I think that I understand the concepts driving the initiative. Lessig suggests that there needs to be a controlled way to release items into the public domain so that the author retains certain residual rights such as (a) attribution to the work; (b) integrity of the work; (c) right to remain an anonymous author; etc.
These principles are basically the tenets of the Moral Rights regimes that are set out in the WIPO treaties. Most countries have adopted statutory protections of Author's/Creator's rights. These "moral rights" however, have not been fully included in the copyright legislation in the United States. Specifically, the USA has deferred to the commercial exploitation of copyrighted works as it believes that is the true objective of copyright. Lessig, proposes to give American creators something that they would already have if they lived in Vancouver or Toronto... moral rights.
That said, it would appear that Lessig has a very good chance of succeeding in the new venture because these regimes are thriving throughout the world. Lessig's "free" price tag is just about right given that non-American nationals don't pay for these additional rights.
Kudos to Lessig, et al. for trying to remedy a glaring deficiency in US Legislation through the formation of a private venture.
You all take a good look at this lump of shit, remember what it looks like. You fuck up in a firefight and I goddamned guarantee you a trip out of the bush - in a body bag! Out here, assholes, you keep the shit wired tight at all times. And that goes for you, shit-for-brains. You don't sleep on no fucking ambush. And the next son'bitch I catch coppin Z's in the bush, I personally am gonna take an interest in seeing them suffer. I shit you not. Doc, tag 'em and bag 'em
Cheers,
Mighty-Troll
I live under the bridge, in a pile of feces.
FUCKING STUPID MODERATOR ALERT!
I found this post while meta-moderating.
This post is ENTIRELY ON TOPIC YOU ASSHOLES!
I am getting FED UP with STUPID FUCKING MODERATORS on slashdot. THIS IS HUMOR. IT HAS EVERYTHING TO DO WITH THE ORIGINAL POST. HOW IS IT OFF-TOPIC!?!?!?!
this place is going down the tubes FAST.