British Groups Launch Creative Archive License
icerunner wrote in to mention that several British institutions have banded together to create the Creative Archive License. From the announcement: "BBC, Channel 4, British Film Institute and OU (Open University) issue call to action for Creative Archive Licence. Media and arts organisations, universities and libraries have today been urged to join an innovative new scheme designed to give the public access to footage and sound from some of the largest film, television and radio archives in the UK, as well as specially commissioned material." We've previously covered this as The BBC Creative Archive.
Creative Archive = (Creative Commons) - (Derivate Works) + (UK Only) + (No Endorsement)
João Pinheiro
It's fine for licensing an archive that is unlikely to change.
But if the intention is to create a living culture, restrictions on use are counter-productive.
What the license says is "you can use our stuff". What a really far-sighted license says is "here are a set of rules for creating stuff. Oh, and our stuff falls under these rules too."
For instance, why ban commercial use? To prevent competition? Sure... but competition is what makes the living culture.
It'd be far more valuable to allow commercial use of - e.g. old BBC broadcasts - so long as the vendors also made their derived products freely available under the same conditions.
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Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.