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Andrew Orlowski Answers Mail on Creative Commons

chronicon writes "Andrew Orlowski takes another swipe at Creative Commons licensing with a look through the mailbag of responses he received from a previous diatribe on the subject. It's obvious to Mr. Orlowski that creativity is 'all about the benjamins.' Yet one interesting point he throws out has me pondering, is a Creative Commons License permanently irrevocable once it's put out there?"

168 comments

  1. Enforceability by fembots · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Does CC improve the enforceability? I mean, what's the incentive to claim/release/share a copyrighted article if there is no way of protecting it properly?

    If a work is released under a CC license, will it be brought to court and judged accordingly in a quick manner?

    What's the difference between CC and common laws in terms of enforceability. It seems nowadays, lawsuits are about financial depth, whoever has enough cash to burn in court for the next 10-20 years will be pretty safe from any litigation, regardless of the right or wrong.

    1. Re:Enforceability by NickFortune · · Score: 1
      Does CC improve the enforceability?

      It's a copyright licence. Your copyrights are just as enforceable under a CC licence as under any other.

      I mean, what's the incentive to claim/release/share a copyrighted article if there is no way of protecting it properly?

      That's jumping the gun a little - you've yet to establish that there is a problem with enforcement. It's a licence under copyright, the same mechanism that Mircosoft use to distribute software and that the record labels and movie studios use to distribute films and music. Ask them about enforceability. They've successfully sued enough people for copyright infringement.

      It seems nowadays, lawsuits are about financial depth, whoever has enough cash to burn in court for the next 10-20 years will be pretty safe from any litigation, regardless of the right or wrong.

      So what's your point? Money talks, obviously. Big corps can bully the little guy, okay. Are you suggesting this as a disincentive to employ a CC licence? I can't see how that follows.

      --
      Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
    2. Re:Enforceability by NickFortune · · Score: 1
      Wow. That's a big post. Curiously it also makes no refernce to the current topic whatsoever.

      Was there some point you were trying to make, or was this just a random opportunity with spam us on behallf of Ayn Rand?

      --
      Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
    3. Re:Enforceability by EternityInterface · · Score: 0

      "The facts show that capitalism is the system of freedom - and that it creates wealth. The facts similarly show that statism is the system of repression - and that it causes poverty. Capitalism is the system of freedom and prosperity. Its antithesis - statism in any form - is the system of oppression and destitution"

      It's been long since I had the opportunity of coming into contact with such strong propaganda, so, thanks.

      Us them us them us them us them us them us them us them.

      Lesse if I got it right:

      Freedom = capitalism = christianity = cash wealthy = imperialism = marriage = fact = beer <> french = communism = islam = soul wealthy = feudalism = hedonism = fiction = acid.

      --
      the sun is god
    4. Re:Enforceability by NickFortune · · Score: 1
      I was hoping to educate some of the spineless, liberal elitists that troll this site about a real philosophy.

      Without endorsing that characterisation, you might have mroe luck if you did it in smaller chunks.

      So would I be correct in assuming that it wasn't response to any specific point I made? Just pick a post at random and *SPAM!* right?

      If so, I'll not bother commenting further.

      Incidentally, where'd you cut and paste it from? It looks like an introduction to a book or a PhD thesis. Certainly it wasn't written for Slashdot.

      --
      Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
  2. Making a Big Deal of Nothing by TheSpoom · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Well, first things first:

    Yet one interesting point he throws out has me pondering, is a Creative Commons License permanently irrevocable once it's put out there?

    In answer, this is from the CC Attribution-NonCommercial license (bold and italics added for emphasis):
    3. License Grant. Subject to the terms and conditions of this License, Licensor hereby grants You a worldwide, royalty-free, non-exclusive, perpetual (for the duration of the applicable copyright) license to exercise the rights in the Work...
    So clearly it *is* permanantly irrevocable, which is a good thing. If it weren't, how could the end user be assured that her or his freedoms to use the software (or whatever) under the license would still be there in the future? This way, an author can't just say "this isn't working out for me, now you have to pay me $10 to keep using [whatever]," as that would be tantamount to extortion.

    Additionally, from the linked Register article:
    The use of an irrevocable Commons license, which effectively ends any hope of the artist being compensated by the creative industries, doesn't seem fair or sensible for most readers.
    This is why there is a Non-Commercial version of the license. And this is also why having a work distributed under a CC license doesn't prevent you from ALSO licensing it under other licenses! That's the whole idea of the NC versions of the license: if someone wants to use your work commercially, they can contact you to work out another arrangement so that you would get some form of compensation for the profits that they might make off of your work.

    But seriously, if you don't like the license, make your own! Nobody's forcing people to use these licenses and I don't see why this person seems to think that they're creating a "crisis" of sorts. Creative Commons licenses are just an easy way of having your work distributed the way you want, and with a license written by a lawyer so that there are no possible loopholes for which someone could take advantage.
    --
    It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
    - E. Debs
    1. Re:Making a Big Deal of Nothing by GenKreton · · Score: 1

      Writing your own license may seem like a good idea until you need to step into court and defend it. If it were that simple would we have bi-weekly postings on slashdot about the legitimacy of the GPL in court?

    2. Re:Making a Big Deal of Nothing by Catamaran · · Score: 3, Interesting
      More info from http://www.lessig.org/blog/archives/000774.shtml
      There's a wonderfully careful analysis of various CC issues at burningbird. Thank you. One point to clarify, however. CC licenses are, at this moment, at least, permanent, in the sense that the term is as long as copyright runs (and we'll see whether that's permanent or not soon enough). That issue was a tough one for us (I, of course, favor "limited terms"), and we're eager for feedback on that issue.

      But just because you can't revoke a particular license doesn't mean you can't revoke the offer. If, for example, you offer content under a CC license for a month, and then change your mind, you can stop offering the content under that license. Anyone who accepted your offer while it was valid, of course, has a deal. But no one after you withdraw the offer can accept anymore.

      --
      Test 1 2 3 4
    3. Re:Making a Big Deal of Nothing by broward · · Score: 1, Redundant

      CC License meme is growing rapidly.
      Looks to me like it has a solid year of growth ahead.

      http://www.realmeme.com/Main/miner/preinflection/c reativecommonscontentDejanews.png

    4. Re:Making a Big Deal of Nothing by NickFortune · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Writing your own license may seem like a good idea until you need to step into court and defend it.

      Or if you prefer, you can sign away all your rights to an agency and take whatever they are willing to give you in return. The point isn't that writing licences is easy (I wouldn't know - IANAL) but that you are free to licence your work as you choose and the CC does expands your choices rather than restrict them.

      As such, it seems like a good thing.

      If it were that simple would we have bi-weekly postings on slashdot about the legitimacy of the GPL in court?

      Well we don't really; not since Harald Welte won a case for violation of the GPL. There's still wriggle room for GPL detractors in that (as far as I know) there has yet to be a US test of the licence. But one of the SCO cases should supply that test real soon now. No one seems to think the GPL will be overturned.

      --
      Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
    5. Re:Making a Big Deal of Nothing by chronicon · · Score: 2, Insightful
      So clearly it *is* permanantly irrevocable, which is a good thing. If it weren't, how could the end user be assured that her or his freedoms to use the software (or whatever) under the license would still be there in the future? This way, an author can't just say "this isn't working out for me, now you have to pay me $10 to keep using [whatever]," as that would be tantamount to extortion.

      I should have pondered longer ;-)

      Of course it would have to be irrevocable until the expiration of the copyright term otherwise it would be useless, even dangerous to the consumer.

      The bigger wonder is just why (besides trolling for hits) are Dvorak & Orlowski so against CC licensing? It's the simplest avenue currently available to let interested parties know what rights you as the copyright holder are granting to them as consumers. Really. *What* is the big deal??

      These advocates of keeping everything locked up tight via the ominous and all-powerful notice "ALL RIGHTS RESERVED" make it sound as if you are signing over your copyrights to the CC organization in their articles. They should (you would think) obviously know that this is not correct at all. Therefore, if they *aren't* just trolling for hits, what is their motivation in these attacks?

      If I want to license my writing or music or whatever to anyone who is interested, CC certainly gives me easy tools to use to do so without the need for a lawyer, etc...

      Orlowski seems to be of the opinion that if you release under a By Attribution - Non-Commercial license that you've already given away the store and can never make any money from that creation again. After all, who's going to buy something that is free?

      Magnatune (at least) has clearly shown that this argument is not the case (otherwise they would no longer exist and/or artists would stop returning to them to market their works on the site). Musicians who never would have gotten any exposure otherwise are at least out there. And, I know some are making money from their CC licensed works, at least from me anyway--as I have purchased more then one Magnatune album myself.

      I guess I don't really care if they are trolling at this point. The more that copyright issues are discussed, the more consumers are going to become aware of how it all works (and how all the big-media driven congressionally imposed restrictions are becoming a royal pain). And they will learn what they can and cannot do with these materials. Calling CC a fad is fine. But the more it's out there, the more the mainstream is going to take notice of things they may never have considered before. You want to stop piracy? Stop making people criminals with ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

      In the long run, the more we understand the issues at hand the better off we are, IMHO...

    6. Re:Making a Big Deal of Nothing by natrius · · Score: 1

      This is why there is a Non-Commercial version of the license.

      That's also why the Non-Commercial Creative Commons licenses suck. The whole point of sharing something with a Creative Commons license is to allow other people to build upon work that you've created, resulting in more creative works for people to enjoy. When you tack on the non-commercial restriction, you're making people jump through hoops to make sure they don't make any money with the new work that has been created. Let's look at an example of a blatant commercial use of a work, such as using a song in a television commercial. If a company uses a Creative Commons licensed song with the ShareAlike and Attribution requirements, that means the resulting commercial will be shared as well, allowing other people to make derivative works as well. That's supposed to be the goal: free usage of and derivation from creative works. Adding on the non-commercial restriction is supposed to let the creator earn money on the work, but far more often it just makes potential derivers look for alternatives, along with hampering the overall goal.

      If someone wants to sell a movie with your song in it, they're either going to have to allow free redistribution of the movie, or ask you how much they have to pay to use your song in the movie. Both of those options are the goals of someone who is sharing their work. The non-commercial clause is unnecessary, and hampers the usage of shared works by many people. The only use that people often want to prevent when they add the non-commercial restriction is when the derivative work is an advertisement, as I've described above. When someone shares there Flickr pictures, they don't want to stop me from using their pictures just because I have Google ads on my blog, but that's what they end up doing. (Okay, I don't know what the non-commercial clause says exactly, but that's another problem. From the wording on the "Human-readable license summary, I think it would be prohibited.) When you combine the existance of the non-commercial clause with many people's latent distrust of corporations, you end up with a lot of people who limit the usefulness of works that they really want to share with people. The whole point of Creative Commons is to make it easy to share, so the murkiness and ill effects of the non-commercial clause hurt the goals of the licenses. If I want to ship people copies of Wired's Creative Commons CD but charge for shipping and the media itself, I can't do that, because some of the tracks are licensed with a non-commerical clause. Or can I? Do I have to provide receipts for the media and shipping to prove that I didn't make money off of it?

      The success of copyleft licenses in the software arena is based heavily on the simplicity of the main license: the GPL. All you have to do is share alike, and you can use the code however you want. The only confusion that crops up is how much you have to share (do I have to pipe in commands from my closed source binary?), not whether or not one can make derivative works at all. If you're aiming for freedom, restricting usage is a bad idea, especially when it's done in such a way that many people choose to restrict usage without being aware of the consequences.

      See also: Towards a Standard of Freedom: Creative Commons and the Free Software Movement

    7. Re:Making a Big Deal of Nothing by rhizome · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So clearly it *is* permanantly irrevocable, which is a good thing.

      Exactly...that's the *point* of the Creative Commons that he doesn't get. So you fork your work private at some point (book-only update to an essay or something), the older stuff remains under the CC license. This is what he can't get his head around, that anybody would even want to be able to do this. He thinks the old version of the essay would devalue the book-only update, which is silly.

      He also equates compensation with perfect control over the work's use. This is the attitude of such an ivory...well, not so academic...*platinum* tower of entitlement addiction that it basically translates to, "How'm I gonna buy a Jaguar *now*?" He doesn't know, he's behind the curve, he's spent too much time writing puff pieces for ad clicks that he finds himself out of touch with what's happening. Poor Andrew!

      --
      When I was a kid, we only had one Darth.
    8. Re:Making a Big Deal of Nothing by MrAndrews · · Score: 1

      "Adding on the non-commercial restriction is supposed to let the creator earn money on the work, but far more often it just makes potential derivers look for alternatives, along with hampering the overall goal."

      Which is exactly why CC needs further development in the C/NC area. If the licences are meant to make it easier to tell what you can and can not use a work for, they're only going half the distance right now. A system needs to be added that lets potential commercial users understand the standard costs of the product.

      The system would have to continue to promote friction-less approaches, such as a flat percentage of total profits. So there's no cost to experiment, and the final bill is predictable. And if the end product doesn't earn a cent, neither do the contributing artists.

      CC was envisioned more to help consumers understand their rights in copying MP3 from the net, and kinda glossed over the whole idea that industries might accept and work with CC-licensed products. It needs to evolve to take that into account.

    9. Re:Making a Big Deal of Nothing by DaveHowe · · Score: 2, Insightful

      When you tack on the non-commercial restriction, you're making people jump through hoops to make sure they don't make any money with the new work that has been created. Let's look at an example of a blatant commercial use of a work, such as using a song in a television commercial. If a company uses a Creative Commons licensed song with the ShareAlike and Attribution requirements, that means the resulting commercial will be shared as well, allowing other people to make derivative works as well.
      So what is the problem? If you are going to make a profit from your use of their work, why is it so terrible to kick some of that back to the guy who did the creative work you are using? If you instead derived your work (an advert, say) from a commercial-only work, you would have exactly one option - approach the copyright holder and ask for permission to use the work (I will leave aside several compulsory-licence schemes some countries have for derivative works)
      If you suddenly find you must now approach the copyright holder for a commercial-usage licence, where is the foul? You are not prevented from using your own talent to produce Works, but *are* prevented from using the fruit of the copyright holder's talent (with or without additions of your own) in order to produce works with commercial value to you.
      Ok, you *do* have a second option. you could ensure the produced Work is not for gain; in practice, this is *not* going to mean an advert, as the CC defines gain as "commercial advantage or private monetary compensation" and any advert must by definition be for commercial advantage. However, I still can't see the problem here. NC/CC is no licence at all *for the purposes of making money* - you aren't prevented from using the Work, you just don't get a free ride. Just do what you would do with any other commercially-published tune or image you came across - assume it is copyrighted, that you will need some sort of licence (and that the CC isn't going to be a get-out-of-jail-free card) and negotiate royalties with the original author.

      --
      -=DaveHowe=-
    10. Re:Making a Big Deal of Nothing by natrius · · Score: 1

      The first example I gave was to show the realm in which most people think the non-commercial clause is reasonable, and far from onerous. I was also showing why the non-commercial clause isn't necessary. Even if an advertisement is created from one's shared work, the resulting advertisement will be a shared work as well! Anyone can create derivative works as they see fit, which is the main goal of sharing one's work. The existance of the non-commercial option puts dollar signs in the eyes of creators, and many end up restricting uses they don't intend to in the name of stopping companies from creating advertisements with their work, which isn't even a bad thing! It's a net gain for the "creative commons", the pool of creative works that all are free to derive from, the same entity that the eponymous organization proclaims to be protecting. If the company creating the advertisement doesn't want to share it, then they approach the author for a license as they'd do normally. Both of these potential outcomes are a win for the creator.

      The second example, me wanting to use a shared picture on my site with Google ads on the side, was showing a use that most people don't intend to restrict, but end up doing far too often merely because the unnecessary non-commercial option exists. If I have to approach the author for a license to use her picture on my web site, which also happens to be shared under a Creative Commons license, then the license has failed. That's the transaction that the license was supposed to make unnecessary, but since I want ads on my web page, the usable portion of the creative commons is shrunk significantly.

      Just do what you would do with any other commercially-published tune or image you came across - assume it is copyrighted, that you will need some sort of licence (and that the CC isn't going to be a get-out-of-jail-free card) and negotiate royalties with the original author.

      See, that's the thing. I wouldn't use a copyrighted work on my web page, because I don't want to pay someone money for a site that I'd make pennies of AdWords revenue on. That wouldn't even pay for hosting. If I'm sharing the content of my site as well, that should be enough. Moreover, that's what most creators intend to be enough from people who create derivatives of their creations.

      To me, Creative Commons licenses are supposed to encourage sharing works for all uses, as long as resulting works are shared as well. They've chosen not to do that; instead, they restrict uses of the work. That doesn't mesh with what my idea of Freedom is. I don't think that all works must be shared, but since the Creative Commons organization is the frontman for freedom outside the software arena, I'd like them to give people a clearer idea of the freedoms they should have, instead of the muddled one they are putting forth. If their goal is to encourage the growth the largest creative commons for creators to draw from, they are failing. They're doing an awesome job in general, but it could be better.

    11. Re:Making a Big Deal of Nothing by DaveHowe · · Score: 1
      The second example, me wanting to use a shared picture on my site with Google ads on the side, was showing a use that most people don't intend to restrict, but end up doing far too often merely because the unnecessary non-commercial option exists. If I have to approach the author for a license to use her picture on my web site, which also happens to be shared under a Creative Commons license, then the license has failed. That's the transaction that the license was supposed to make unnecessary, but since I want ads on my web page, the usable portion of the creative commons is shrunk significantly.
      Well, I suspect your web page, with googleAd, is a collective work (although IANAL, and I am certainly NAL in your juristiction) and therefore unless you were charging for access to your web page, it wouldn't be an issue.
      Shipping a collective work which is on physical media is another matter. The real problem here is the key and repeated term "commercial advantage or private monetary compensation" which is not defined otherwise, and is sufficiently vague as to be stretched (by a creative lawyer) to cover almost anything you got any sort of payment for.

      The problem is, there *has* been this sort of abuse of the GPL, so it can hardly be held as a shining example of how to do this. For example, the excellent nessus vulnerability scanner (which I used to test my own "ramparts" as a commercial network admin has now gone subscription-only as commercial "competitors" weren't actually competitors at all - but companies taking the free nessus code and patterns and selling them bundled with their own pretty gui engines.... More and more GPLed projects are now dead (with either no replacement, or code taken back in-house) and its a sad reflection on the world that these free gifts for the many have been withdrawn due to the actions of those who want to make a quick buck from the hard work of others. How this relates to the CC NC seems quite clear though - and is probably why the CC NC takes this route.

      --
      -=DaveHowe=-
    12. Re:Making a Big Deal of Nothing by FLEB · · Score: 1

      Still, though, unless you had a remix license (prohibiting redistributing full unaltered copies), downloaders could do something akin to a "fork", offering (re-licensing, basically) the content under acceptable terms from their own source. The license is attached to the content, not the distribution point.

      --
      Information wants to be free.
      Entertainment wants to be paid.
      You just want to be cheap.
    13. Re:Making a Big Deal of Nothing by FLEB · · Score: 1

      They just seem to be approaching the issue with tunnel vision. There's no realization that an artist does is not forced to put EVERYTHING THEY MAKE under CC after they first sip the Kool-Aid. Granted, some zealots might indeed say "CC everything!", and these could be the people D&O are counterpointing. I would call those zealots just as blind as the "CC nothing!" crowd.

      Creative Commons, just like any licensing scheme, is something you should actually THINK about before doing it. Yes, there are cons, in that you give up editorial control and a fair chunk of revenue generation, but there are also pros, in that you are promoting and perpetuating the open exchange of source material which you yourself can draw off.

      Really, the problems these have are only applicable to licensors who don't think first before they sign the dotted line.

      If there's something that you can't bear to have recontextualized, DON'T CC IT! If there's something that you want control over, DON'T CC IT! If you think it'll lose you money, and you don't want that, DON'T CC IT!

      Actually, it reminds me of a rant by a Podcaster I once subscribed to (it was a while ago, I forget who). He was going on and on about how it was unfair that his CC content was getting slice-and-diced, and put into other shows (which his license permitted). From what I can understand, this person only seemed to think of CC as a way to generate some street cred, and possibly to get some bandwidth offload.

      Really, all I can say to these folks is: THINK FIRST! CC is a license, a legal document which gives up your rights. This may be good for you, or bad for you, but don't complain when the terms you put down work like they're supposed to.

      --
      Information wants to be free.
      Entertainment wants to be paid.
      You just want to be cheap.
    14. Re:Making a Big Deal of Nothing by ozmanjusri · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The bigger wonder is just why (besides trolling for hits) are Dvorak & Orlowski so against CC licensing?

      They are both content producers who have a substantial vested interest in restricting entry to the market. CC licencing makes it simpler for talented amateurs or other new starters to dabble in the fields Dvorak & Orlowski make their income from. Once they are producing competing works through competition, reduce their ability to demand high fees for their works.

      There's no real difference in motivation between Dvorak & Orlowski trying to scuttle CC licensing and Microsoft's attacks on the GPL and Linux.

      --
      "I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
    15. Re:Making a Big Deal of Nothing by pfafrich · · Score: 1
      This is why there is a Non-Commercial version of the license. And this is also why having a work distributed under a CC license doesn't prevent you from ALSO licensing it under other licenses! That's the whole idea of the NC versions of the license: if someone wants to use your work commercially, they can contact you to work out another arrangement so that you would get some form of compensation for the profits that they might make off of your work.

      Having a clear Non-Commerrcial clause is the main reason I've chosen CC over other open source licences for text like GNU Free Doc Licences. I feel perfectly happy letting other hackers use my work to do as they want. I use their material just as much so its a mutually benifical arangement. But if someone is going to make money from my work then I want my cut (through using some other comercial licence).

      Really I'd like a open source code licence, which would do the same as the CC-NC clause. GPL does not seem to do this. Anyone know of a good equivilent to CC-BY-SA-NC for code?

      Web-site advertising. The data I've got to work with is a text database of plant information (7000 records). Under CC its fine for people to use the data on their own websites, but could they put a google ad on it? The question I've got is whether having adverts on such pages classes as commercial?

      --
      There are four sorts of people in the world: fools, lunatics, idiots and morons. - Umberto Eco, Foucaut's pendulum.
    16. Re:Making a Big Deal of Nothing by NickFortune · · Score: 1
      There's no realization that an artist does is not forced to put EVERYTHING THEY MAKE under CC after they first sip the Kool-Aid.

      Interesting sentence construction. May I ask, have you studied Neuro Linguistic Programming? You use some very Eriksonian language patterns there.

      Yes, there are cons, in that you give up editorial control and a fair chunk of revenue generation,

      More accurate would be to say that you have the option to give up these things if you so choose, depending on the options you select for your licence. The CC is not nearly so monolithic as you seem to think.

      Of course, once you consider these things as options rather than as some sort of compulsion, it becomes difficult to see them as "cons", doesn't it? ;)

      If there's something that you can't bear to have recontextualized, DON'T CC IT! If there's something that you want control over, DON'T CC IT! If you think it'll lose you money, and you don't want that, DON'T CC IT!

      Are you sure you're not an NLPer? All those CAPITALISED EMBEDDED COMMANDS make me feel like I'm talking to Ross Jeffries.

      Really, all I can say to these folks is: THINK FIRST! CC is a license, a legal document which gives up your rights.

      Gosh. If you put it that way, I get an image of a big paper scroll with red sealing wax, SNEAKING up on someone, STEALING all their rights, and then running away away laughing as it hands them off to passers by. Silly, isn't it?

      You get a much clearer understanding if you consider the process as one whereby you choose to grant to others a selection of rights over a particular creation of yours. That way we're clear that the creator controls which rights are granted, and that the grant is by his or her own choice. And we don't need any anthropomorphic legal documents running around and giggling, either.

      Thinking, as always, remains a good idea.

      --
      Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
    17. Re:Making a Big Deal of Nothing by Sneakabout · · Score: 0

      IANAL, so this may be wrong but...

      Anyone who took up the license must re-release their changes under the CC license. Say I made the change of altering one character, I then release that in the future, meaning that although *you* are no longer releasing it under that license, others can still acquire it under that license until the copyright expires.

      Unless I'm misunderstanding it somehow.

      --
      Sneakabout is a mysterious figure, having done too much mathematics.
    18. Re:Making a Big Deal of Nothing by ajs318 · · Score: 1

      There is nothing in copyright law that states you cannot licence the same work under multiple licences. {The only exception is Public Domain: any Derivative Work of a Work already in the Public Domain is automatically deemed to be in the Public Domain.} Remember, copyright law tells you what you may not do; and a licence says what you may do in addition to what the law does not tell you not to do.

      If you want to licence your work under the GPL but you also want to allow commercial use as long as you will get paid for such commercial use, then use the GPL but also offer an alternative, non-Free/usage-only licence. {Of course, not every combination of licences is sensible: for instance, GPL and BSD won't work [why not?]}. If somebody makes a Derivative Work from the GPL version, then they must release it under the GPL; but if they make a Derivative Work from the commercial version, then they have to pay you. That's the way MySQL and Qt are licenced. TTBOMK nobody buys commercial licences for MySQL or Qt though ..... they just use the GPL versions,

      Bonus points if you don't make this clear to the commercial licensee: There's a very good chance that if you ripped off just the changes they made {which will in themselves constitute only a small percentage of the Derived Work, based on an Original Work on which you hold the copyright}, then it might well fall within your Fair Use rights and you might be able to reincorporate the mods into the GPL version!

      --
      Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
    19. Re:Making a Big Deal of Nothing by cbreaker · · Score: 1

      So, you're *basically* agreeing with this guy, yet you insult him a number of times on unrelated matters such as capitalization.

      Way to Slashdot!

      I do agree that he seems to not realize you can selectively create a CC license that would certainly allow you to recieve revenue for your work, or place controls on how the content is used. But you didn't have to be a dick about it.

      --
      - It's not the Macs I hate. It's Digg users. -
    20. Re:Making a Big Deal of Nothing by NickFortune · · Score: 1
      So, you're *basically* agreeing with this guy, yet you insult him a number of times on unrelated matters such as capitalization.

      Sorry. My fault; I should have supplied a bit more background detail.

      Eriksonial hypnosis is a hypnotic technique used by the late Milton Erikson. Do a google - there are some fascinating stories told about him. Erikson had some very covert approaches to hypnosis including the use of presuppositions and embedded commands to influnce entrain the conciousness of his subjects. This work was picked up by Richard Bandler and John Grinder who used it as the basis of something called Neuro Linguistic Programming, or NLP for short.

      The embedded command technique in particular gets used a lot by fledgeling NLPers in email. Basically, it involves marking out certain phrases in a body of text so that the subconcious will give them special consideration and thereby come to AGREE. WITH ME, NOW, I think that irrespective of the effeciveness of the technique when spoken, I think you'll AGREE WITH ME that it looks pretty silly on discussion forum. Feel free to disAGREE WITH ME on this.

      Anyway, the point of all this is, that when I see a post that embeds

      DON'T CC IT!
      DON'T CC IT!
      DON'T CC IT!
      Then I do begin to wonder if the poster might prehaps be trying to propagate an anti CC message whilst pretending sympathy to the cause. In NLP they call that "pacing".

      Now, keeping that in mind, ("all the way to the *back* of your mind" as Richard Bandler might have said), go and reread the post I first commented on. I don't know how quickly you'll begin to notice all the little incongruencies between his surface message and the and the way in he tries to present his arguments, but I do know that, as you begin to notice these things, you'll find yourself amazed by all the ways he is trying to influence your thinking against the CC licence :D

      And then re-read mine, and see if you still think I agree with him.

      Hopefully, with a bit of context, you can see where I'm coming from, now. :) And don't mind the pattern language it's all purely for illustrative purposes :)

      --
      Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
    21. Re:Making a Big Deal of Nothing by FLEB · · Score: 1

      Well, the overzealous shouting is more exasperation than anything else.

      The weird grammar comes from the fact that I take about 3 or 4 "edit passes", and, really, my comments tend to grow from the middle more often than the standard top-to-bottom writing. Of course, when I'm sleepy or distracted, I'll miss parts, or only half-delete what I meant to change.

      --
      Information wants to be free.
      Entertainment wants to be paid.
      You just want to be cheap.
    22. Re:Making a Big Deal of Nothing by FLEB · · Score: 1

      I do agree that he seems to not realize you can selectively create a CC license that would certainly allow you to recieve revenue for your work, or place controls on how the content is used. But you didn't have to be a dick about it.

      I do realize that there are the "noncommercial" class of licenses out there, and those would work just as well in a lot of cases. I should have mentioned, though, that I really can't stand those licenses, because they're so poorly worded as to prohibit things like trying to make less than enough money to run your server. In my defense, I had just posted that position in a thread up the line some way, so I was still thinking in those terms when I wrote this.

      --
      Information wants to be free.
      Entertainment wants to be paid.
      You just want to be cheap.
    23. Re:Making a Big Deal of Nothing by NickFortune · · Score: 1
      Well, the overzealous shouting is more exasperation than anything else.

      Fair enough. That's why I asked the question. I know my own grammar gets unintentionally convoluted sometimes.

      And my apologies if I seemed over aggressive; I think I went into autopilot. Flame wars on NLP discussion lists can get seriously weird sometimes.

      --
      Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
    24. Re:Making a Big Deal of Nothing by CrosbieFitch · · Score: 1
      any Derivative Work of a Work already in the Public Domain is automatically deemed to be in the Public Domain


      Ahem. The typical case is generally the opposite:

      Any derivative work of a work already in the public domain is automatically deemed to NOT be in the public domain, but copyright of the author of the derivative.

      This is one of the key reasons why the GPL is necessary. If the PD worked as you suggest, we could all simply donate our source code to the public domain knowing that all derivatives would be uncopyrightable, i.e. necessarily public domain.

  3. Don't Feed The Trolls. by Bob9113 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Don't feed the trolls. Andrew Orlowski is not simply failing to understand with an open mind and a desire to learn, he is choosing to not understand in order to incite. Don't let yourself be baited.

    1. Re:Don't Feed The Trolls. by whoever57 · · Score: 1
      Don't feed the trolls. Andrew Orlowski is not simply failing to understand with an open mind and a desire to learn, he is choosing to not understand in order to incite. Don't let yourself be baited.
      He seems to have an anti-Lessig campaign going.
      --
      The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    2. Re:Don't Feed The Trolls. by afree87 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I can understand trolling up some important geeky political issue, but using Lessig's abuse testimony in a personal attack against him is just sick.

    3. Re:Don't Feed The Trolls. by FLEB · · Score: 1

      Is this an attack? The only thing nearly approximating a "thesis statement" I can find is:

      A dramatic update on Professor Lawrence Lessig's other court case written by his friend John Heilemann appears in New York Metro magazine this week.

      Which may work for Lessig Watch Weekly, but doesn't really explain how it made the pages of The Reg.

      (and, yes, this is an editorial attack on the article's author)

      --
      Information wants to be free.
      Entertainment wants to be paid.
      You just want to be cheap.
    4. Re:Don't Feed The Trolls. by dthree · · Score: 1

      This is even more transparent with Dvorak. In fact, I think it's one of his signature styles, going even back to his Macworld days. At least Orlowski attempts to justify his position with (arguably) cogent logic, but Dvorak just throws his hands up, saying "I don't get it!" Shit, John, RTFM.

      --
      "I forgot my mantra."
  4. exactly by sum.zero · · Score: 1

    his professed confusion is entirely intentional. he even trolls for more hits/letters in the final paragraph.

    it's one thing to open up a real discussion on a subject. it is another to twist the existing facts to push your own sensational opinion...

    sum.zero

  5. canines dog by sum.zero · · Score: 1, Interesting

    his nick is the pitbull isn't it? so those would be dog canines, not vampire teeth.

    sum.zero

  6. Someone will make money off of the work by dotslashdot · · Score: 0

    I can understand this licensing scheme if no one made money off of an artist's work.

    However, the trouble is that some commercial entity will inevitably pick up the artist's work and use it for making money, exploiting the fact that the work is not protected by copyright. Surely an artist who donates his work to the public without any expectation of compensation does not intend for someone else to profit off of his work.

    It seems to parallel the GPL vs BSD licensing scheme. Under GPL, the creator is donating their work under the license requirement that others distributing that work who exploit must also donate their work to the public. Under BSD license, Microsoft--for example--can start exploting BSD for commercial purposes without paying any compensation to the developers or donating any code to the public.

    1. Re:Someone will make money off of the work by antifoidulus · · Score: 1

      You call it "exploiting", but guess what, the person who released their code under the BSD license knew that was a possibility and released it anyway, indicating that they find NOTHING wrong with that. So why is this bad again? It's their choice to release it under whatever license they choose.

      Choice=freedom!

    2. Re:Someone will make money off of the work by plasmacutter · · Score: 2, Insightful

      As I remember it, creative commons does not involve giving up copyright, but simply telling others you are exempting certain activities from litigation, such as noncommercial sharing, remixing, etc. http://creativecommons.org/about/licenses/

      --
      VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
    3. Re:Someone will make money off of the work by aussie_a · · Score: 1

      However, the trouble is that some commercial entity will inevitably pick up the artist's work and use it for making money, exploiting the fact that the work is not protected by copyright. Surely an artist who donates his work to the public without any expectation of compensation does not intend for someone else to profit off of his work.

      This is why there are non-commercial licenses such as this one.

    4. Re:Someone will make money off of the work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      However, the trouble is that some commercial entity will inevitably pick up the artist's work and use it for making money, exploiting the fact that the work is not protected by copyright.

      Not "Insightful", only "Factually incorrect".

      CC licensed stuff IS protected by copyright. If it wasn't, it would be Public Domain. CC licenses are about saying "this is still my copyright, but I will allow you to do A, B and C (over and above normal fair use provisions), if D..."

      D may be "if you are not making money from it".

      So, completely wrong on all points.

    5. Re:Someone will make money off of the work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I see it as more a matter of this, the free licensing allows wider penetration of the creative work. The more that people embrace the work, and the other work of the artist in question the greater the chances for the artist to succeed with their art.

      This is much like the olden days before copyright. If you were a good musician and you made good art, then you would be supported one way or another.

      If someone "breaks out", or becomes vastly popular through their work, then the artist can sell that work themselves. Other people who attempt to actually sell lets say, physical media of an artist's music would be somewhat fraudulently selling it if the artist had CDs or records and such available for sale. Sure you can do that with copyleft stuff, but people would support the artist if they can already get mp3s for free for example.

      Voluntary micropayments, various merch, live performances, actual items for those who want them, and commisioned works all show us that there are plenty of ways for a person to make money through the copyleft environment.

      If this guy decrys the fact that we are so far from the techno-utopia where this is the future, he has to realize you have to start sometime. And we've seen for years now that we must begin to turn the tide on the IP-world. Enhanced copyright and the destruction of the public domain through increasing content creator's rights only hurts our culture in the long run. Acknowledging the inevitable and moving to a new model is simply the right thing.

    6. Re:Someone will make money off of the work by B'Trey · · Score: 1

      It DOES parallel the GPL vs BSD scheme. There are two versions of the license. One allows any use, one allows only non-comercial use. If you don't want a comercial entity using your work, release it under the non-comercial version.

      --

      "The legitimate powers of government extend only to such acts as are injurious to others." Thomas Jefferson.

    7. Re:Someone will make money off of the work by MrAndrews · · Score: 1

      I put this out here partly on a dare, and partly because it relates. The key flaw in all these systems is that the creators are assuming that the people that use them will click a "donate" button on their website. But that's not the case, and in situations like the GPL or the CC-C-SA, you're effectively letting others buy Ferraris off your hard work. It doesn't seem to occur to many of these good-natured folks that they're being taken advantage of by less-scrupulous companies.

      Anyway, my fuller postulation on the subject is here: http://dustrunners.blogspot.com/2005/08/chains-in- our-gpl.html

      (Mr Fitch: consider it done)

    8. Re:Someone will make money off of the work by martinX · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No problemo, there is a "no commercial use" type of Creative Commons licence available.

      To quote them:"Offering your work under a Creative Commons license does not mean giving up your copyright. It means offering some of your rights to any taker, and only on certain conditions."

      And specifically, you can choose as part of your licencing conditions: "Noncommercial. You let others copy, distribute, display, and perform your work and derivative works based upon it but for noncommercial purposes only.

      Examples: Gus publishes his photograph with a Noncommercial license. Camille incorporates a piece of Gus's image into a collage poster. Camille is not allowed to sell her collage poster without Gus's permission."

      Linky

      CC licencing was created (I think) to bridge the gap between the full copyright laws and the public domain. It enables people who want to have a bit of fun with something (music, writing, graphics etc)to be able to release it into the wild with some re-use provisos attached.
      --
      When they came for the communists, I said "He's next door. Take him away. Goddam commies."
    9. Re:Someone will make money off of the work by tricorn · · Score: 1

      Wherever do you get the idea that someone using a CC license (or GPL) is expecting people to donate money to them? And where do you get the idea that someone is going to be "buying Ferraris" by republishing something that was published under such a license? If there's that much money to be made from it, then competitors will pop up and drive the price down (which is easy, since the cost of production is close to zero). Oops, there go those Ferraris!

    10. Re:Someone will make money off of the work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      CC licencing was created (I think) to bridge the gap between the full copyright laws and the public domain. It enables people who want to have a bit of fun with something (music, writing, graphics etc)to be able to release it into the wild with some re-use provisos attached.

      It was also created to give people who wanted to create things the ability to do so without having to hire a lawyer to make up some legalese about how it should be used. The CC licenses are concise and easy to understand (even moreso than the GPL, which is still shorter than most EULAs, yet somehow companies still seem "surprised" when they're bitten in the ass by it. I wonder if these companies get "surprised" when microsoft audits them regarding their long-winded EULAs?)

    11. Re:Someone will make money off of the work by MrAndrews · · Score: 1

      It's not that someone expects that people will donate money to them, it's that they probably don't expect that a large company that earns millions of dollars off their work will not even send a thank-you note in return, because the sense of common courtesy that we take for granted doesn't envelope the whole world in a bug, lovey commonsfest.

      As for buying Ferraris... I admit this applies more to CC than GPL... but all it takes is for Sony Music to pick up a set of tracks from an artist and make a sudden marketing blitz around the world, and they'd be quite wealthy indeed. Sure, the competitors could sell the same songs too, but first-mover advantage would still help Sony win the day.

      Once you go outside the well-connected world of the internet, lots of people don't understand what a CC license is, or that you could just download that song rather than buying it for $25.00 at HMV. A huge market waiting to be exploited.

    12. Re:Someone will make money off of the work by FLEB · · Score: 1

      However, the trouble is that some commercial entity will inevitably pick up the artist's work and use it for making money, exploiting the fact that the work is not protected by copyright. Surely an artist who donates his work to the public without any expectation of compensation does not intend for someone else to profit off of his work.

      Scenerio 1: No open license
      1.) You create something that you don't intend to profit (monetarily) from.
      2.) You don't license it.
      3.) You fail to profit.

      Scenerio 2: Open license
      1.) You create something that you don't intend to profit (monetarily) from.
      2.) You license it with an open license. People around the world use it for their various projects. One of these projects is commercial. Someone with the ability to leverage the resource you provided takes the opportunity and profits from it.
      3A.) You fail to profit.

      Outcome:
      Both scenerios 1 and 2 appear to have the same outcome, which is to be expected as per step 1. You do not profit.

      Conclusion
      Since, in both cases, you were unable to create direct profit through your own actions. Why should you be owed in the second scenerio by those who have done well by their own profitable abilities?

      --
      Information wants to be free.
      Entertainment wants to be paid.
      You just want to be cheap.
    13. Re:Someone will make money off of the work by FLEB · · Score: 1

      I see it as more a matter of this, the free licensing allows wider penetration of the creative work. The more that people embrace the work, and the other work of the artist in question the greater the chances for the artist to succeed with their art.

      Bingo.

      Eternal copyright is only really backed by the fear that whatever you're copyrighting is THE ONLY SALABLE THING YOU WILL EVER CREATE! Copyright is used to level the playing field between physical and idea-based economies. Just as physical objects crumble and deplete, so must copyrights.

      --
      Information wants to be free.
      Entertainment wants to be paid.
      You just want to be cheap.
    14. Re:Someone will make money off of the work by Marcus+Green · · Score: 1

      Why would you be owed anything in the second scenario?

    15. Re:Someone will make money off of the work by MrAndrews · · Score: 1

      Let's say you have a farm with an abundance of carrots. So many, in fact, that you put a sign out by the road saying: "If you're hungry, take one!". Free-for-all. Maybe someone's gone without lunch, and this'll help them out. It's good for the community, and it makes you feel good.

      You wake up one morning to find the local Safeway loading half your crop onto a truck. They're going to sell it all in their stores, and make a handsome profit cause it was free to begin with. ...the person doing the selling may be providing an important service by marketing the product, but their contribution cannot stand on its own. I can't sell carrots if I have no carrots.

      Can someone take a freely-licensed work and sell it without remitting anything to the author? Sure. But is it right?

    16. Re:Someone will make money off of the work by B'Trey · · Score: 1

      Your post is remarkably clueless on many fronts, but I'll just address one issue:

      but all it takes is for Sony Music to pick up a set of tracks from an artist and make a sudden marketing blitz around the world, and they'd be quite wealthy indeed.

      There are thousands of artists out there who would absolutely LOVE for Sony to take their music and market it around the world without signing them to a pesky contract. Sure, the artist might not make any direct compensation for the tracks Sony grabbed, but the exposure would be invaluable. Why do you reckon Sony signs artists to contracts BEFORE they market the music? You think they do it out of the goodness of their heart to benefit the artist?

      --

      "The legitimate powers of government extend only to such acts as are injurious to others." Thomas Jefferson.

    17. Re:Someone will make money off of the work by hotdiggitydawg · · Score: 1

      I wonder what Andy Warhol would've done if the Campbell's Soup label was published under the same licence?

    18. Re:Someone will make money off of the work by MrAndrews · · Score: 1

      There are thousands of artists out there who would absolutely LOVE for Sony to take their music and market it around the world without signing them to a pesky contract.

      The assumption being that the artist has any way to cash in on the craze Sony creates. Many artists would believe they could, I'm sure, but it's not as easy as it sounds. And Sony is under no obligation to tell the public about your own personal website when they sell your music, so you might end up a long way down a Google search... IF the end-user bothered to check for you in the first place.

      Let's say that first CD went platinum... next track you put on your site'll be on Virgin Radio before you could blink, and the song after that, and after that, and so on. And if you're still CC'ing them, NONE of those songs would earn you money either. You don't have the marketing power that Sony has. And the few dollars you earn from a few local gigs you land because you "sound like that song on the radio" won't come close to matching what the label execs are raking in from your work.

      On the other hand, if you view a recorded song simply as marketing for your live performance, this is all good. But I'd think that anyone who's actually gone into a recording booth for hours to fine-tune their track wouldn't think that's just some disposable set of bytes. There's no problem with INDIVIDUALS shuffling around your track for free, in my view, because THAT is marketing. But as soon as someone starts to charge money for it, they've crossed the line into pure commercialism, and they do not deserve a free ride on your back.

    19. Re:Someone will make money off of the work by FLEB · · Score: 1

      You forgot the fact that there are infinite copies of those carrots. (Me? Of all people? Pulling the "Copyright isn't theft" card?) You, Safeway, the lunchless, and Bob down the street all have the same chance to use or profit from the "carrots".

      When you a relatively loose free license, the content becomes, in essence, a static resource, no longer your controlled expression. If a licensor can't handle that fact, which is a valid position, then they should really think twice about approaching free licenses. The warm fuzzy feeling is just so much better when you're actually putting something on the line.

      --
      Information wants to be free.
      Entertainment wants to be paid.
      You just want to be cheap.
    20. Re:Someone will make money off of the work by MrAndrews · · Score: 1

      the content becomes, in essence, a static resource, no longer your controlled expression. If a licensor can't handle that fact, which is a valid position, then they should really think twice about approaching free licenses.

      I agree completely, yet I still think it's a failing of the licensing schemes that they are incapable of playing ball with the copyright world. It should be possible for someone to promote a free license for their work, permit remixing and adaptation, and expect no compensation except where profit is being made from their art. Safeway owes a debt to you for the carrots. Sometimes you'll set a price for them and demand payment up front, sometimes not. My argument is that it's fundamentally wrong to profit from someone else's efforts and give them nothing; and the free licences are absolving those doing the selling of any sort of guilt. I would think that even supporters of fully free culture would think that putting a check on corporate greed and exploitation would be a good thing...

    21. Re:Someone will make money off of the work by B'Trey · · Score: 1

      Let's say that first CD went platinum...

      Let's say that you'd need to hire an agent right away to deal with all of the contract offers you'd receive.

      Nothing says that just because you release something under the CC that everything you do for the rest of your life is covered under the CC.

      The reason that many artists release works under the CC is becuase they want to get exposure so they can get discovered. If you have an album that goes platinum, even if you don't earn a penny from the album, you can consider yourself discovered.

      Like I said, there's a reason that record labels sign acts to multi-album deals BEFORE they promote the music. I'm sure that Virgin would be happy to sign you up and put out your next few records after Sony has gone to all the trouble and expense of making you famous.

      The bottom line is that the scenario you're describing is so far from reality that it wouldn't even make good fiction. The plot would be too unvelievable.

      --

      "The legitimate powers of government extend only to such acts as are injurious to others." Thomas Jefferson.

    22. Re:Someone will make money off of the work by CrosbieFitch · · Score: 1
      You should have posted that contentious phrase of yours directly:

      Today, there's no effective way to earn a living from writing open source software, because it's "free". The result? The GPL is relegating some truly brilliant programmers to being hobbyist inventors, and it is because there is no mechanism in the GPL for paying them for what they've contributed.
    23. Re:Someone will make money off of the work by MrAndrews · · Score: 1

      yeah, sorry, I meant to do it, but got distracted, and then it seemed like I was trying to antagonize people twice in the same thread.

    24. Re:Someone will make money off of the work by CrosbieFitch · · Score: 1

      In this case you provide a CC-NC license, and for anyone wishing to commercially exploit it, you rely upon them approaching you for a bespoke license.

      However, why should your particular work ethic prevent a more Christian one?
      Hence:
      I donate my work freely to the world and anyone who would make use of it, on the proviso that anyone who does so, whether or not they make money in the process, must donate their work to the world on the same basis.

      You may believe in denying your fellow man a living from your gifts, but not everyone shares that approach. Be careful before you denounce their work ethic.

    25. Re:Someone will make money off of the work by MrAndrews · · Score: 1

      You may believe in denying your fellow man a living from your gifts, but not everyone shares that approach. Be careful before you denounce their work ethic.

      I don't believe in denying them that right. In fact, I want people to take my art, shake it around in their brains, and create something so fantastic it amazes the world how brilliant they are. I've put quite a lot of my money where my mouth is in this regard, with no regrets. I fully believe in the CC-SA fundamentals.

      On the other hand, the work that I kicked off and some other person perfected is still a collaboration. They wouldn't have had the basis to make their product without mine as a foundation, so to some degree (and it's all relative), we're in it together, as authors.

      I would think that anyone who believes in CC-SA would also gladly donate a portion of their earnings to those who helped make the money possible... not out of necessity, but an unforced moral obligation, almost. As a recognition of the collaboration that took place.

      My concern (and we've gone round this block before, you and I) is that not everyone is as good-natured as a CC-SA fan, and that any CC license that doesn't try to address the question of commercial exploitation is putting artists at a disadvantage against the forces that are most likely to abuse CC.

    26. Re:Someone will make money off of the work by CrosbieFitch · · Score: 1

      There is nothing inherently wrong with commercial exploitation, just as, for example, there is nothing inherently wrong with racial or sexual discrimination.

      The wrong only occurs when you insert the word 'unfair'.

      The GPL and CC-SA are commercially permissive 'Share Alike' licenses, i.e. they fully permit any commercial use of the work or derivatives. However, unlike the BSD or public domain, they ensure FAIR commercial exploitation by requiring any re-publishing of the work or its derivatives to occur under the same license.

      In this way they do indeed address commercial exploitation. They ensure that it's fair.

    27. Re:Someone will make money off of the work by MrAndrews · · Score: 1

      There is nothing inherently wrong with commercial exploitation, just as, for example, there is nothing inherently wrong with racial or sexual discrimination.

      That was very well done. Very seriously: you should write for a magazine somewhere. You've got a knack for brilliant bits of prose.

      In this way they do indeed address commercial exploitation. They ensure that it's fair.

      Fair only to those reselling, in that they have an even field. But it doesn't help the artist that created the work in the first place. Now you could argue that the artist should be paid before they work a la patronage, but that's a backward notion not suited to a very large population. Too many great artists would fall through the cracks that way. So then you could say that they get paid for performing the work of art somehow, but that brings me back to my 2nd-grade talent show...

      My particular talent at the time was drawing. I was (at the time) really good at all sorts of visual arts. So when it came time for the talent show, others said they'd do dance, singing, skip-rope... I said I would do a painting. "No," said the teacher, "you can't paint in front of an audience for ten minutes at a talent show. You need to PERFORM!". So instead, I learned to juggle at the last minute, and had a miserable time.

      Some art is not suited to performance, so the artist falls back on a physical copy of the art. In the digital world, that copy tends to have no value. You can say the first copy gets sold to "supporters" for an exorbitant price, but that's patronage, and it is inefficient and flawed on a large scale.

      If we're keeping copyright around as a stick to enforce CC-SA, why not keep it around to enforce royalty payments built on the same principles? Make it simple, generic, and frictionless; don't change the non-commercial rights... just create a structure that lets the artists build upon one another's work in a way that puts food on the table if the work is ever sold. It imposes no restraints on anyone in the system that they would (hopefully) not feel obligated to live by anyway. But, like the CC-SA, it needs teeth so it can prevent abuse.

      If someone at the grocery store drops a dime out of their wallet while paying for food, even though it's touched the ground and is technically free-for-all, you DO give it back to them, right?

  7. The Benjamins? by slickwillie · · Score: 3, Funny

    And here I thought it was all about the Pentiums.

  8. Same Failed Arguments As Those Against Open Source by mmurphy000 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Mr. Orlowski's arguments are the same ones as get trotted out time and again against open source. Regardless of whether you think open source is awesome or overrated, it's tough to argue that open source is irrelevant, which is how Mr. Orlowski paints the Creative Commons.

    For example, you could easily convert:

    The use of an irrevocable Commons license, which effectively ends any hope of the artist being compensated by the creative industries, doesn't seem fair or sensible...

    into

    The use of an irrevocable [open source] license, which effectively ends any hope of the [programmer] being compensated by the [venture capitalists], doesn't seem fair or sensible...

    Similarly:

    Issuing the material under [an open source] license may earn them a pat on the back from an expensive American law school, but it pretty much guarantees they won't be compensated.
    From two reccie missions we conducted - purely for research purposes, of course - into [CompUSA] last night revealed thousands of people willingly handing over their earnings to enjoy [software]. Their only demand being that it be "Good [Software]".

    Is the Creative Commons going to become huge? Perhaps not. But Mr. Orlowski's gotta come up with better arguments than these tired ones.

  9. you are wildly off-base by sum.zero · · Score: 1

    cc licensed works retain their copyright. same with gpl and bsd.

    just because you issue something under a license does not mean that copyright vanishes. as an example, under the gpl you are using someone's copyrighted work. without the gpl, for example, you have absolutely no permissions [outside of fair use, etc] to use that work. same with cc licenses. without the cc, you can't use the work at all [see previous caveat].

    what the licenses do is give you more rights then you normally would have and expedite the process you would have to go through in order to obtain such permissions, provided you obey the restrictions imposed by the license. if you violate the those conditions, you no longer have thsoe permissions and are commiting copyright infringement.

    you also seem to confuse open with public domain. just because you can see something, does not mean it is the public domain. it is not, unless the copyright has expired or the rights holderhas specifically placed it there.

    lastly, plenty of people/companies make money off of gpl/bsd/whatever software. why shouldn't an artist be able to do the same with the cc [especially if they use a non-commercial cc license]?

    sum.zero

  10. Very wrong, twice by rewt66 · · Score: 3, Interesting
    First, the work is protected by copyright. It's released under a license that gives other people the right to use it in specific ways. But the work is still copyrighted. In this way, it is similar to the GPL, and the parent suffers from a confusion that seems common about the GPL.

    Second, there is a non-commercial version of the CCL. This lets the author/artist sue anyone making money from his/her work, while still releasing it under the CCL.

  11. I Can't Stand Paternalism... by Comatose51 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The use of an irrevocable Commons license, which effectively ends any hope of the artist being compensated by the creative industries, doesn't seem fair or sensible for most readers.

    What is the whole point of his diatribe? It's not like someone took a gun to the artist's head and told him to do it. The artist presumably read and understood what he is doing and did it. Can we just stop this paternalism? If Ray Charles wants to keep his music royalties and rights, he can. It's not as though CC is being pressed into law. It's your material and your choice. Behind his comment is this assumption that most artists are morons and will want to revoke his decision some day. That's perfectly alright and he can. He can release his work under some other license if he likes. CC is just a convient template to use if that's the road you want to take.

    And guess what? It is through the sampling of CC music from iRate radio that I discovered new music and purchased copies of artists' other songs. You can give some of your music away for free and keep the rest under copyright. You can do whatever the hell you want with your work. CC is just one option out there. Having choices is usually good.

    --
    EvilCON - Made Famous by /.
    1. Re:I Can't Stand Paternalism... by MrAndrews · · Score: 2, Interesting

      But a big concern is that many artists don't actually KNOW what they're signing up for. I've talked to a lot of artists lately who thought that CC-C-SA was the best thing since three-buttoned mice, but also had this crazy notion that it somehow required Sony to pay you royalties if they pressed 10 million copies of your CD and sold it all over the world. But you don't have any protection there, so you're screwed.

      The real issue is that CC stops short of addressing compensation in all this. We're all quite good at giving proper credit to those involved, but CC and GPL don't address the basic social contract concept of paying for what you use. If you could say: "Use freely", "Use only with per-case permission", or "Use with this standard royalty formula", the licenses would actually be fully useful, and the creator would have a full deck to play with.

    2. Re:I Can't Stand Paternalism... by tricorn · · Score: 1

      So if that's what you're after, use your own license. No one is forcing you to use a CC license.

      Plenty of artists sign up with publishers (music, books, whatever) without realizing that they just lost all control of their work entirely, including how it will be marketed and how it will be priced, yet all expenses will be coming out of their royalties, which they might never see, and they have no way of going somewhere else if they don't like how it's being done. In music, many artists find that not only are they not getting royalties, they're contractually prohibited from trying to sell any of their work any other way, or even from giving it away.

      Anyone who looks at a Creative Commons license, decides to apply it to their work, but doesn't understand how it works, would probably have been taken advantage of by some big company and been in much worse shape anyway.

      Fortunately, the people railing against Creative Commons licenses are irrelevant. They won't use it, and that's just fine. By their nature, works published under a CC license will tend to propagate more than they would if distributed under a restrictive license - eventually (as with GPL software), the quantity and quality of such works will tend to crowd out others. There will always be room for proprietary works, but they won't be the unquestioned norm that they are now.

    3. Re:I Can't Stand Paternalism... by MrAndrews · · Score: 1

      I, personally, use CC-NC-SA because I want to retain some level of control over how my work is used commercially. So I'm not really worried about another license. I'm worried about my fellow artists who have a distorted impression about what their chosen license does for them. You're right, they would get taken advantage of by a big company with a traditional agreement, but that's no excuse for being royally screwed again, while trying to be noble.

      I don't think CC necessarily has to change, but I think it needs to be clearly spelled out for its users: CC-C-SA means you will NEVER earn money for your work except in a tip-jar arrangement, and if your work is widely sold for millions of dollars, you do NOT have any legal right to royalties. If everyone had to read that statement and agree to it before using a CC-C-SA license, I'd sleep easier. We're turning a lot of vulnerable artists into sheep in a wolf's meadow with the vague descriptions of how CC operates.

    4. Re:I Can't Stand Paternalism... by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      I hope that in your attempts to bring enlightenment to the musical masses, you don't go overboard and turn musicians away from a powerful promotional tool. I really don't see how the people at Creative Commons could be any clearer about how their license works. I'm sorry if "many artists" jumped onto the bandwagon without understanding the details, but they shouldn't be blaming anyone but themselves.

      Nor do I see that the CC would be improved by adding your licenses into the mix. The CC is about letting people say, "Here's what you can do with this work, without involving me in any way." I don't see how a license that took pages of legalese to say, "Ask me first" would serve anybody, including the people who wanted to be asked first. Nor do I see any hope for the royalties license. Since everybody is going to have a slightly different idea of what constitutes a proper royalty formula, the end result will be so complicated and error prone that you probably ought to bring a lawyer in anyways. But above and beyond that, these additional licenses simply fly in the face of the goals of the Creative Commons.

      If you think a series of royalties boilerplates would be useful to the world, have a lawyer draw them up, and publish them for anyone to use. In essence, that's all CC is doing.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    5. Re:I Can't Stand Paternalism... by MrAndrews · · Score: 1

      you don't go overboard and turn musicians away from a powerful promotional tool.
      True, that's a big danger. I really am trying to not sound so alarmist. You shoulda heard me last week! Woo!

      I don't see how a license that took pages of legalese to say, "Ask me first" would serve anybody, including the people who wanted to be asked first.
      But that's what CC-NC-SA does right now. You can still use it for commercial purposes, but you have to ask first. It would still be extremely easy to pick a CC-C-SA license and continue on that path, but right now people wanting to share without giving up any royalty rights have an on/off situation, which seems to me to go against what CC is about.

      Nor do I see any hope for the royalties license. Since everybody is going to have a slightly different idea of what constitutes a proper royalty formula
      True, but the same could be said about the Attribution, ShareAlike or Commercial elements of the license already. The thing would be to give the user a field to type in a percentage number... then in the license plain text, it could plainly state: "If you use this work for commercial purposes, you should pay me X% of your profits, should there be any". It's very simple, takes care of a lot of needs very simply, and doesn't slow anything down. If that's still not good enough, the user could go with CC-NC-SA and negotiate controls on a case-by-case basis.

      But above and beyond that, these additional licenses simply fly in the face of the goals of the Creative Commons.
      I don't think they do at all! Creative Commons is about sharing the creative works of our societies in ways that traditional copyright doesn't allow. It's not about impoverishing our artists for the sake of free-flowing information. It's about free (speech), not NECESSARILY free (beer). If CC can be enhanced to make commercial use of art as simple as it has made basic licensing, it will be one major nail in the coffin of (C).

      If you think a series of royalties boilerplates would be useful to the world, have a lawyer draw them up, and publish them for anyone to use.
      I'm on it (but from what I hear, so is CC).

    6. Re:I Can't Stand Paternalism... by tricorn · · Score: 1

      Of course, you can still create a modified version of your work, and you retain full control over that - and for commercial uses, that's worth quite a bit. That's something that only you can do. Frankly, if I wrote a song, released it under CC, and it was used in Star Wars Episode 7, I'd be thrilled even if I didn't get any royalties out of it. It's quite likely that if I hadn't released it as such, it wouldn't be in that movie and not only wouldn't I get any royalties, I wouldn't get any exposure either.

      There have been several TV shows that were delayed coming out on DVD because of copyright clearance issues. A good example is Roswell. They used a bunch of bands, and arguably helped those bands gain popularity, but when the DVD was being produced, the bands wanted more money, or wouldn't give permission. Result? The bands not only didn't get any money, but they're not getting any exposure on the DVD anymore. Too bad, since some of the action was specifically cut to the music - the producers hand-picked replacement music and tried to fit it in properly, but not having the music that was originally aired is a loss.

      Copyright law should require that any license to use something as part of another work be irrevocable and transferable to any medium that essentially maintains the work as it was originally released. No issues with republishing archival CDs with old issues of magazines, or with copyright lapsing on a movie but not on some of the music used in the movie (Its a Wonderful Life). No issues with putting TV shows on DVD as originally broadcast (and no, taking commercials out doesn't "change" it). It doesn't mean that just because you have a movie with 10 seconds of a song, you'd have the right to put out a soundtrack album with that song on it. You'd only have license to the song (or part of the song) as actually used along with the video images.

    7. Re:I Can't Stand Paternalism... by GT_Alias · · Score: 1

      It's not like someone took a gun to the artist's head and told him to do it.

      I got the impression that was the point of his article...that CC isn't the end-all answer to copyright, though CC-zealots tend to push it that way. I didn't read it as an article saying CC should be buried and forgotten, only that it shouldn't be pushed as the future of copyright. Just as open source is a good idea that's not going away, it also shouldn't be pushed as the ONLY solution for the software industry.

      It was a well-written piece providing a balance to those who take extreme view-points WRT copyright.

    8. Re:I Can't Stand Paternalism... by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      Okay, I'm coming around a bit. I don't have time for a full response, but I don't see a simple percentage working, because the percent you can demand is very much a function of how the source work is used. For example, somebody uses a song of mine in a movie. Is it the full song, or just a few seconds? Is it playing in the background, or is it the audience's main focus? Is it the second song on the end credits (presumably to be heard after everyone has left the theater and turned off the VCR)?

      I guess I can see a use for a dual license, where a work is licensed both under CC-NC and CC-RoyaltyScheme. And I guess there is something compelling about letting people define a full-fledged system within the confines of traditional copyright law.

      This is a bit unnerving. I came to Slashdot, and actually had to reconsider my original opinion. I'm feeling a bit lightheaded.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    9. Re:I Can't Stand Paternalism... by martinX · · Score: 1

      But a big concern is that many artists don't actually KNOW what they're signing up for. I've talked to a lot of artists lately who thought that CC-C-SA was the best thing since three-buttoned mice, but also had this crazy notion that it somehow required Sony to pay you royalties if they pressed 10 million copies of your CD and sold it all over the world.

      These people would have trouble tying their own shoelaces. They need a manager.

      --
      When they came for the communists, I said "He's next door. Take him away. Goddam commies."
    10. Re:I Can't Stand Paternalism... by MrAndrews · · Score: 1

      In an attempt to serve the Greater Good, even the wisest people can make themselves into unintentional sacrifices. Too many people think the license means what they believe it to mean, rather than what it says. It's like anti-FUD, and it's just as dangerous, especially when repeated by otherwise smart people.

    11. Re:I Can't Stand Paternalism... by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1
      If the music is creative commons licensed, then why would people pay Sony for it? There are two possible answers:
      1. It is more convenient for them to buy a CD.
      2. They don't realise that it is CC licensed.
      Reason one seems completely fair to me. Reason two would indicate that Sony was not displaying the CC license on their copy, which I believe is an infringement of the license and so they are liable for prosecution.

      We're all quite good at giving proper credit to those involved, but CC and GPL don't address the basic social contract concept of paying for what you use.

      This is a somewhat outdated business model which doesn't really encourage the creation of anything. The first program/album/whatever you release is an advertisement. It tells people that you are capable of creating more and that they are worth. You then get paid in advance for the next thing you create. Once you have created it then it is no longer under your control because someone else funded it. You the go on to create something new. This model worked for several hundreds of years before recording became common. In the last century duplication was expensive so this scarcity drove up the prices of copies. Now, that is no longer true.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    12. Re:I Can't Stand Paternalism... by MrAndrews · · Score: 1

      Reason two would indicate that Sony was not displaying the CC license on their copy, which I believe is an infringement of the license and so they are liable for prosecution.
      Or, Sony display the required information about the CC license, but the general masses don't have a clue what it means... besides which, they've already bought it by this point, and can't be bothered to hunt down the original author anyway. It's a question of convenience, at that stage.

      This is a somewhat outdated business model which doesn't really encourage the creation of anything.
      I don't think the basic social contract is at all outdated. In the days before we invented recording, you would pay the performers while they played in front of you, or they'd give up playing music and become shepherds. Nowadays we have the ability to "perform" for people around the world, rather than just down in the pub, so the same notion needs to be addressed: if you don't pay them, they'll become accountants.

      The whole concept of patronage was/is a brief flicker in history compared to the tip jar. The idea of buying the art on some "thing" like a CD distorts the basic underlying agreement: support your artists. You're not paying for the plastic of the disc or the bits of the AAC, you're (supposedly) dropping a coin in the performer's hat.

      So back to the point: a CC-C-SA or GPL product requires a re-user to give proper credit, but it also frees them of the responsibility to support the artist they're using. And these days (as in all days, really), if you don't have some force of law at your disposal, trusting people to do the right thing is a flawed concept. It's telling the kids the cookie jar is open, and assuming they'll only eat one.

  12. It's a floor wax AND a breakfast cereal! by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

    The problem you cite (and, come to think of it, Orlowski cites as well) doesn't exist, because the Creative Commons offers both "commercial-ok" and "non-commercial-only" versions of its license. If you're not okay with commercial entities picking up your work, it's pretty obvious which one to use.

    You can also choose whether or not the license is "GPL-like", in that you can say that anyone republishing or modifying your work must make the work available to others under the same terms and in an editable format. If a corporation can pick up your work and improve it, but can't demand exclusive rights to those improvements, it's a huge check on their power.

    In essence, there is no single license, even though the author of the article gives no indication that such fine-grained control exists.

    --

    You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

  13. Actually.... by atrerra · · Score: 2, Insightful

    According to sources on the CC mailing list, Creative Commons licenses can be changed (for future downloaders) but not revoked (for people who downloaded your CC licensed work in the past).

    You retain ownership of the copyright and as such you can choose to change the license at any time.

    You can't however revoke a license you have already granted. That means if you relase something under the Attribution-Sharealike license, and someone downloads it that same day, then they are free to use it under terms of that license for ever. If you change the license to 'All Rights Reserved' the very next day, then future downloaders can't use it at all.

    To complicate things though, someone *could* just download it from the original downloader who is forced to always make it available under terms of his or her BY-SA license (brain explodes).

    The challenge is going to be proving what license you downloaded something under. One way to potential prove what CC terms you D/L'd something under is the Internet Archive, another is Yahoo Myweb (although IAMNAL etc).

    IMHO I think the CC organisation has done a poor job of explaining things like this and other similarly complex issues. They don't have a message board on their website, and emailed questions are never answered.

    Creative Commons certainly aren't helping diffuse the misinformation out there which is a shame, and makes attacks like this one hardly suprising.

    1. Re:Actually.... by CGP314 · · Score: 1

      They don't have a message board on their website, and emailed questions are never answered.

      No kidding, I've been trying to get an answer to this question for a while. Perhaps someone here can help me out.

      I have a question regarding the non-commercial clause of licenses and how it relates to advertising. I am in the process of putting together some classroom resources for teachers using the CC BY-NC-SA license. The resource includes both my own work, and the work of others under compatible licenses (ie BY, BY-SA). Ultimately, I would like to make the materials available on my website -- however, my website does contain advertising. The viewer is not forced to see the ads, and I will make the materials free to download. I am just concerned that the presence of the ads may violate the NC clause of the license.


      -Colin

    2. Re:Actually.... by MrAndrews · · Score: 1

      CC tends not to reply to questions like that (I have been lucky enough to get a "we don't answer that kinda thing" email or two over the years), but from my discussions with lawyerly people (IANAL, naturally), the opinion is that the ads are not something you see in exchange for the content, therefore they aren't considered payment for the content, so they're merely peripheral elements to the website and do not violate the NC license.

      On the other hand, it doesn't stop someone from deciding otherwise and suing you. Best bet is to contact those people whose licenses are NC and ask them if it's okay. It defeats the purpose of the license, but that element is left too vague as-is, so better safe than sorry.

    3. Re:Actually.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The challenge is going to be proving what license you downloaded something under. One way to potential prove what CC terms you D/L'd something under is the Internet Archive, another is Yahoo Myweb (although IAMNAL etc)."

      IMHO this has already become an issue over at Groklaw. She changed the licence to suit herself, and now the early posts there are not under the licence conditions that they were posted under. The original posters have no form of redress about this, and can not now show what the posting terms *were*. This just goes to show that you can not rely on "trust".

  14. i just dis two 'reccies' down to the hmv... by sum.zero · · Score: 2, Insightful

    but i didn't see anyone buying 'good' music. what was that point about comnpusa again? oops, never mind.

    sum.zero

  15. Changing the default rules by cfulmer · · Score: 3, Insightful

    US Copyright law is basically just a bunch of restrictive default rules about what people can & can't do with somebody else's work. The author can change these rules, typically by granting a license for other uses. But, if the author fails to do this, then the default rules still apply.

    Writing license agreements, though, is generally the purview of lawyers. Because lawyers are expensive and time-consuming, many creators do not go through the trouble, even if they do not want to retain all the default rights. As a result, earing serious liability for infringement, few people subsequently use these works.

    With Creative Commons, there is no need to see a lawyer if they don't want to use the default rules -- they have a set of standard agreements already pre-packaged for the layperson to use. As a result, there's virtually no cost to letting people reuse your work.

    There's another benefit -- because the agreements are standard, users only need to understand them once. There's no need to see a lawyer to explain each license agreement that comes in through the door.

  16. Copyrights expire. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Even our precious GNU/Linux will be public domain one day.

  17. Isn't this the same guy who... by plasmacutter · · Score: 3, Insightful
    is now unreasonably railing on ISP's claiming they should not be neutral carriers of data?

    I think this guy is hardly one to be considered an "authority" on either copyright, the internet, or creative commons for that matter.

    I trust Lessig, a law professor, in his administration of creative commons, and consider his support for the viability of it's license a lot more valuable than that of a journalist who seems to believe "audible magic" would actually work in "on the ground" p2p filtering situations.

    --
    VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
  18. too much ad hominem by danharan · · Score: 2, Interesting

    According to the Andrew Orlowski, those that are lobbying hardest for CC licenses are neurotic Aspies, pleading for their pet project but uninterested in helping creators.

    Ad hominem, impuning motives and infantilization of those you don't agree with. That's no way to argue.

    Except maybe on /.

    Oh... never mind then. Way to go editors, we need more troll posts! :)

    --
    Information: "I want to be anthropomorphized"
  19. Creative Commans has failed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Creative Commans is just that, its just as the writer says a fancy peice of wording with absolutely zero practicality.

    The fact that it has failed can easily be demonstrated by the fact that there is no major work released under the CC (analogous to the linux kernel for GPL) to show that the idea has suceeded.

    CC will die a natural death.

    1. Re:Creative Commans has failed. by CGP314 · · Score: 1

      The fact that it has failed can easily be demonstrated by the fact that there is no major work released under the CC

      Flickr, 4,202,909 creative commons photos as of now.


      -Colin

    2. Re:Creative Commans has failed. by CGP314 · · Score: 1

      The fact that it has failed can easily be demonstrated by the fact that there is no major work released under the CC

      Whoops, also forgot the BBS: Documentary.


      -Colin

  20. CC will facilitate projects that were unthinkable by SilentReallySilentUs · · Score: 3, Informative

    We recently created a website for collaboration in creative writing - Collaze that uses cc licence. We wanted the contributors to write freely for the public domain without losing the rights to commercially utilize their work later. CC seemed to be custom made for this purpose. So, tomorrow if some entity wants to commercialize the collaborative work, it can do so provided it has the permission of the contributors. Writers can agree and give thier permission to the publisher with or without taking royalty - this depends totally on the writer. I think this is just the beginning. CC will be great for a variety of collaborative work in the future.

  21. Is there really any point to it? by PCM2 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    It seems to me that the people who support the idea of the Creative Commons license are the people who believe very strongly in this idea of "the commons." As far as I can tell, this seems to be an idealistic doctrine which says that the sum total of human creative endeavor is the birthright of every human being, and that everybody should ideally have access to every creative work (either now, or at some point in the future). This ideology naturally makes anyone who wants to profit off his/her own creative works tend to bristle. I don't think Creative Commons is really a bad thing in any particular way, though; like Orlowski, I'm just not sure if there's really any need for it.

    In practice, the Creative Commons license seems to mainly appeal to people who want to spread their own creative works in some kind of "viral" way. The license is a public statement: Go ahead and take this, use it, don't worry about it, I won't sue you. (And there may be a couple of additional clauses, such as "I won't sue you unless you try to profit from it.")

    But how do you define "profit"? If nobody would benefit in any way from the use of your work, then why would they want to use it in the first place? To my mind, benefit and profit are synonymous here. Maybe they don't sell your song. But maybe they post it on a Web site that accepts advertising. Are they profiting from your song then? It seems to me that if you want to set up all these profit/don't profit clauses, you need to write a little bit more fine print than your average Creative Commons license gives you.

    Second, copyright law already gives the author of a work absolute and complete control of how it is used. I'll give you an example of how this works. I am the author and copyright holder of a comic strip called The Adventures of Action Item. Since I first drew it in 1999, this comic strip has had a fairly storied existence. It's been e-mailed around the known universe, printed up in magazines, used as a print sample, and it's constantly available on the Web page above. Every now and again someone writes me to ask if they can use it in one way or another, and my response varies.
    • When they wanted to print it in a couple of different magazines, I said OK, since it was going to be used as editorial content. But not for free; I negotiated a fee each time. You're selling magazines, I want a cut.
    • When people e-mail blast it to all their friends, I do nothing. Not just because it would be a little difficult to do anything about that, but because I honestly don't care. Go right ahead. (Hey look at that, I just got viral distribution and I never used a Creative Commons license.)
    • When people want to host it on their own Web sites, on the other hand, I usually decline. Just link to mine, please. Occasionally someone will post it without asking, and occasionally I will find out who they are and ask them to remove it.
    • When Xerox wrote to ask me if they could use it as a print sample for one of their printers, I decided that was an acceptable advertising-related purpose, because they weren't trying to co-opt the content or "message" of the strip. The (admittedly garish) colors in the artwork were what was being shown off. Plus they printed it up on cool-looking newsprint stock. I said OK -- and negotiated a fee.
    • When companies write to ask me if they can use it in some kind of company publication, however, I usually decline. I don't want the strip associated with their company. It's probably meant to make fun of their company.
    • Then again, sometimes people write me and ask if they can print up fifty copies and hand them out as an icebreaker or other materials for a class they're teaching, and I'll probably say that's fine.

    The point of all this? Every case is different. But that's just the thing -- existing copyright law gives me that right. I can really do whatever I want with my own works, and I can grant that other people can use them for whatever

    --
    Breakfast served all day!
    1. Re:Is there really any point to it? by chronicon · · Score: 2, Interesting
      The thing is, you can have it my way or you can have it the Creative Commons way. The Commons license isn't granting you any new power, controls, or freedoms -- copyright law is what's giving you everything, no matter which way you choose to license your stuff. People who are pro-Creative Commons, anti-copyright are fooling themselves. It's the same thing. All Creative Commons is, as far as I can see, is a lawyer who was nice enough to draft up some stock boilerplate for you, free of charge. That was nice of him.

      I think that you have hit it dead on and that is where the Dvorak/Orlowski confusion seems to be so contrived. CC is not about granting the copyright holder more rights--no one can do that but congress. It's not anti-copyright either. Not at all. It's just a simple way for you to tell consumers en masse what they can and cannot do with your work. If you'd rather do the one-off permissions thing, then don't use CC. Easy.

      If you post a By Attribution - Non-Commercial CC license with your work and someone wishes to use it commercially, then they can ask you and you can say yes or no. You, as the copyright holder, are still in control.

      If you want to STOP licensing a particular work under a CC license, you can do that too--for all future consumers. Anyone who obtained the work previously under the CC license that you now no longer wish to use STILL has the rights you granted to them (until the term of the copyright expires, which will matter to neither party since they will both now have long been dead. What is the term now? Life of the author + 70 years or something to that effect?).

      Either way you slice it, your rights as copyright holder are not diminished at all. You are in control to grant redistribution rights to others either en masse via CC or individually as interested parties approach you. Whatever works best for you...

      So *what* is the big deal with these guys that they so despise CC and act like it is something that it is not? I want to think it is more then trolling for hits, but there doesn't seem to be any other motive that I can tell...

    2. Re:Is there really any point to it? by ChaosDiscord · · Score: 2, Insightful
      All Creative Commons is, as far as I can see, is a lawyer who was nice enough to draft up some stock boilerplate for you, free of charge. That was nice of him.

      Just like the nice lawyer who drafted up the GPL and the LGPL. Shame that faded away without an impact on the software world.

      Suggesting that Creative Commons is just some boilerplate licenses is an oversimplification. The Creative Commons is the implementation of a belief that things should be more free than they are, just like the GPL.

    3. Re:Is there really any point to it? by Geof · · Score: 1

      I happen to agree with those who support "thin" copyright. However, beyond the ideology, the convenience of a standard agreement can be significant due to lower transaction costs. The cost (time and effort) to the person who licenses their work is low. Because the license is standard, the cost to whoever uses the work is also low (they don't have to contact the artist, and they don't have to worry over the legal details).

      If transaction costs are too high, they smother use (for example, merchants institute minimum purchase amounts for credit card use). CC may not pay artists any money, but audience fostered by the additional sharing can benefit their reputations. Because of the network effect, sharing, like interest, compounds, so that audience may be significantly larger than if the artist a) said yes to anyone who asked, or b) used a custom license.

    4. Re:Is there really any point to it? by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      copyright law already gives the author of a work absolute and complete control of how it is used

      This one statement is the basis of your entire argument. The problem with it is that it is dead wrong.

      Copyright law gives you nothing. Enforcement of copyright is what gives you what, if any, control you have. The thing is, the times have changed. Enforcement was never easy, but now violating copyright has gone from being unrealistically dificult to the common and mundane. That makes enforcement practically impossible - while the ability to catch and punish violators has remained approximately constant, the number of violators has sky-rocketed.

      The creative commons licenses are a practical admission of the current reality. If people are going to copy your shit no matter what you do, you might as well accept it, get over it and make the best of it. The CC licenses are just one approach to doing exactly that.

      You can fight human nature, but in the long run, you will always lose.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    5. Re:Is there really any point to it? by Bogtha · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It seems to me that the people who support the idea of the Creative Commons license are the people who believe very strongly in this idea of "the commons." As far as I can tell, this seems to be an idealistic doctrine which says that the sum total of human creative endeavor is the birthright of every human being, and that everybody should ideally have access to every creative work (either now, or at some point in the future).

      No, that isn't the case. It's more to do with the assumptions people start with.

      Most people start with the assumption that copyright is some form of natural property right, so so it follows that it is wrong to take that property away from people. This is wrong.

      The only rational basis for any law is to measure its cost and its benefit against the state of nature - the "default", if you will.

      Property rights are easily justified (to most people). It's difficult to have a stable society if people can't own property like land, food etc. Tangible things. It's the job of government to pass laws to allow a stable society to exist. So the cost of property rights - the curtailing of our right to simply pick up and use what we want to, when we want to - is vastly outweighed by the benefit of a stable society.

      Copyright is another matter. The state of nature gives us the freedom to copy things, derive new works of art from things, advance science based on others' works. These are vital things for a free society of the type most people want. So the cost of simply treating copyright as property is too high.

      So a compromise was made. Copyrights would be limited to a short period of time like 14 years, and then it would revert to the public domain; basically be treated the same as in the state of nature. That gives all the benefit of providing in-demand authors with a stable way of generating an income and creating original works as a full-time profession, but the cost to society - the curtailing of our right to copy, etc, is minimised.

      After that, of course, the cost to society became greater and greater as corporate entities gained political power, until present day, when many people confuse copyright with property rights.

      All many (most?) Creative Commons people are doing is recognising the value to society of limited copyright. That's not the hardcore idealism you make it out to be, it's actually closer to the original form of copyright than the monstrosity it has become today.

      But how do you define "profit"?

      The license should define this. If it does not, then it remains undefined until a court has to decide one way or another, at which point, it's likely to be defined as it would commonly be understood by a reasonable person.

      Second, copyright law already gives the author of a work absolute and complete control of how it is used.

      No. It gives the author control over how it is copied. I can buy a copy of your work, and rip it up. You might not like that, but you cannot stop me, because it's my property. You hold the copyright, but I own the property.

      I'll give you an example of how this works.

      Every single instance of the example you give involves copying. That is what gives you the right to control their actions.

      There's really one main thing that I insist on when people want to use any of my copyrighted works for something, though, and that's that you ask me.

      Creative Commons licenses are for people who have already decided that the answer to the question is specific circumstances is "yes", and they don't want to be bothered with lots of requests. If you want to decide on a case-by-case basis, then don't use a Creative Commons license. That's your prerogative.

      --
      Bogtha Bogtha Bogtha
    6. Re:Is there really any point to it? by tricorn · · Score: 1

      Your last paragraph is exactly the point. It is a way of standardizing a particular set of permissions, for people who don't WANT to be asked each and every time. You want to be asked, good for you (and thank you for Action Item!), and you're right, copyright allows you to be discriminatory. However, you're slightly off a bit when you say that copyright gives you absolute and complete control. It doesn't. Once you've made the choice to publish something, that is to "make public", you have given up a significant amount of control over it. Copyright only gives you the rights granted in the copyright law itself. It doesn't, for instance, keep me from saying in a meeting "Now then, to fully own this challenge, I'll need to be goal-oriented and results driven", nor from having everyone in the meeting except the PHB realize I'm making fun of the PHB because they've all seen Action Item as well (probably from the copy posted in several places, which most likely falls under fair use, which is a limitation of the exclusive rights an author has under copyright).

      The problem with your "honestly not caring" when people send copies to all their friends is that now people have no idea when it is OK to infringe copyright and when it is not OK. Either they don't care at all (which is bad if you're for strong copyright protection), or they have to guess in each case whether it would be OK to do it. Certainly you don't want several thousand e-mails a day asking you for permission to send a copy to mom, do you?

      Now maybe, for you, there isn't a CC license that meets your needs. That doesn't mean that everyone wants or needs the same level of control that you do. A GPL or Creative Commons license actually strengthens copyright law, by making it become more of a habit to NOT violate it - and maybe there should be one that codifies what your level of "that's OK with me" blanket permission would be: "personal copying, not in connection with any business or for commercial purposes" or something like that. Not giving permission, but condoning the copying of it anyway, just reinforces the idea in people that copyright law is something to be generally ignored.

    7. Re:Is there really any point to it? by cgreuter · · Score: 1

      In practice, the Creative Commons license seems to mainly appeal to people who want to spread their own creative works in some kind of "viral" way. [...] All Creative Commons is, as far as I can see, is a lawyer who was nice enough to draft up some stock boilerplate for you, free of charge. That was nice of him.

      There's one other thing. In most people's minds, the word "copyright" seems to be defined as "you have to pay for it" while stuff you don't need to play for is "public domain". The CC licenses illustrate in an eye-catching way that there's actually a whole continuum between those extremes.

      But once again, what's wrong with that? I find the whole fracas kind of perplexing. Yes, some CC advocates are kind of nuts, but so what? The CC licenses are a useful tool for some artists. What's wrong with that?

      (As an aside, regarding Orlowski's comment that there was already an informal system in place: yes, there is a certain amount of leeway wrt. illicit samples, but that didn't stop Beatallica from getting C&D'd by Sony or the Gray Album from getting suppressed or the Verve losing Bittersweet Symphony. If you use a copyrighted work without permission, you are at the mercy of the copyright holder and the fact that they often don't sue provides no guarantees.)

    8. Re:Is there really any point to it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People who are pro-Creative Commons, anti-copyright are fooling themselves.

      No, they're not. You cannot be pro-CC and anti-copyright as CC uses copyright to do its thing. To be pro-CC and anti-copyright you have to not understand CC.

      All Creative Commons is, as far as I can see, is a lawyer who was nice enough to draft up some stock boilerplate for you, free of charge.

      That's entirely the point.

      Some people will make money off their work, some people won't (or not enough to bother with legalities). The CC licenses were created for the latter group.

      These people didn't want their works (words, pictures, music, film, etc.) completely restricted, but wanted to share with others. They didn't want to completely give them away (public domain), but wanted more to give people more leeway than the default rules that copyright law laid down. CC is all about easing the default restrictions.

      You can still make money off a CC licensed work by using a "non-commercial" license. But this would still allow (say) charities and high school year books and college student projects to use your stuff, but for you to still pay the bills.

      Why is so hard to understand that some people want to share? That every last single thing I do is not about money? CC is just another option in allowing your work to be spread.

    9. Re:Is there really any point to it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interesting, however, you fail to see the point of the article. It is my opinion that:

      It seems to me that the people who support the idea of the Creative Commons license are the people who believe very strongly in this idea of "the commons." As far as I can tell, this seems to be an idealistic doctrine which says that the sum total of human creative endeavor is the birthright of every human being, and that everybody should ideally have access to every creative work (either now, or at some point in the future). This ideology naturally makes anyone who wants to profit off his/her own creative works tend to bristle. I don't think Creative Commons is really a bad thing in any particular way, though; like Orlowski, I'm just not sure if there's really any need for it.

      In practice, the Creative Commons license seems to mainly appeal to people who want to spread their own creative works in some kind of "viral" way. The license is a public statement: Go ahead and take this, use it, don't worry about it, I won't sue you. (And there may be a couple of additional clauses, such as "I won't sue you unless you try to profit from it.")

      But how do you define "profit"? If nobody would benefit in any way from the use of your work, then why would they want to use it in the first place? To my mind, benefit and profit are synonymous here. Maybe they don't sell your song. But maybe they post it on a Web site that accepts advertising. Are they profiting from your song then? It seems to me that if you want to set up all these profit/don't profit clauses, you need to write a little bit more fine print than your average Creative Commons license gives you.

      Second, copyright law already gives the author of a work absolute and complete control of how it is used. I'll give you an example of how this works. I am the author and copyright holder of a comic strip called The Adventures of Action Item. Since I first drew it in 1999, this comic strip has had a fairly storied existence. It's been e-mailed around the known universe, printed up in magazines, used as a print sample, and it's constantly available on the Web page above. Every now and again someone writes me to ask if they can use it in one way or another, and my response varies.

      • When they wanted to print it in a couple of different magazines, I said OK, since it was going to be used as editorial content. But not for free; I negotiated a fee each time. You're selling magazines, I want a cut.
      • When people e-mail blast it to all their friends, I do nothing. Not just because it would be a little difficult to do anything about that, but because I honestly don't care. Go right ahead. (Hey look at that, I just got viral distribution and I never used a Creative Commons license.)
      • When people want to host it on their own Web sites, on the other hand, I usually decline. Just link to mine, please. Occasionally someone will post it without asking, and occasionally I will find out who they are and ask them to remove it.
      • When Xerox wrote to ask me if they could use it as a print sample for one of their printers, I decided that was an acceptable advertising-related purpose, because they weren't trying to co-opt the content or "message" of the strip. The (admittedly garish) colors in the artwork were what was being shown off. Plus they printed it up on cool-looking newsprint stock. I said OK -- and negotiated a fee.
      • When companies write to ask me if they can use it in some kind of company publication, however, I usually decline. I don't want the strip associated with their company. It's probably meant to make fun of their company.
      • Then again, sometimes people write me and ask if they can print up fifty copies and hand them out as an icebreaker or other materials for a class they're teaching, and I'll probably say that's fine.

      The point of all this? Every case is different. But that's just the thing -- existing copyright law gives me that right. I

    10. Re:Is there really any point to it? by LilSerf · · Score: 1

      You're right, you probably don't want a Creative Commons license. You have a visible presence as the author and copyright holder of your work, and are easily contactable if someone wants permission to use your work. And you want to maintain careful control over who uses your work.

      If someday someone wants to use your strip, and you can't be located, they can't use it. Even if they're just printing it on a flyer to promote donations to orphans, they're going to avoid liability and not use a work without permission. But if you want to be sure only the orphan fundraisers are using your stuff, and not the crazy cultists, you probably DO want to stick with your basic copyright protections and not grant anything further with CC.

      Creative Commons is most simply a way for an author to say "Don't bother contacting me, I give you permission in advance." It's an easier way to grant the permissions you routinely grant without having to deal with every person wishing to use your work.

      That way someone without the resources of Xerox can ensure they're legally allowed to use it.
      If you don't want your work used, even non-commercially, don't use a CC license.

      Creative Commons isn't about subtracting protection from works that the author wants to be protected. It's about allowing reuse of works that the author doesn't mind sharing.

      The difference between those two is something only the author can decide.

    11. Re:Is there really any point to it? by paologat · · Score: 1
      Copyright is meant to be a mutually beneficial agreement between society and authors - society grants authors an artificial monopoly on duplication of their works, so that authors are encouraged to create more.

      In my opinion, the main problem with existing copyright law is that this artificial monopoly is granted automatically, and that its duration keeps increasing retroactively. I'm not talking about Mickey Mouse here - take the parent poster's comic strip for example. If in 2050 I wanted to distribute some copies, who knows if PCM2 will be around to grant me permission? So the current trend towards perpetual copyright makes sure that a large number of interesting creative works - those that are not profitable enough for the author or his heirs to care about in the long term - will become unuseable by law. This outcome is not "mutually beneficial" - the author does not gain anything, and society loses the opportunity for further use of the work.

      If you want your works to be redistributable, possibly under some conditions, Creative Commons licenses are one way to patch this legal bug.

    12. Re:Is there really any point to it? by Eivind+Eklund · · Score: 1
      Your statements makean assumption that some of us aren't willing to make: That you (or I) as the author is going to be available to decide in each case.

      I don't want that cost. I'm frequently unavailable, and I would like to make it possible for people to use some of my work then, too. I change e-mail addresses. I want people to be able to use some of my work when they can't get a current e-mail address for me.

      At some point, I will be unavailable permanently. I'd like people to be able to use some of my works then, too.

      These aren't works that I would negotiate a fee for. The cost of negotiating feesand giving permission would be too high compared to the few fees I would get.

      Eivind.

      --
      Doubting the existence of evolution is like doubting the existence of China: It just shows that you're uninformed.
    13. Re:Is there really any point to it? by NickFortune · · Score: 1
      It seems to me that the people who support the idea of the Creative Commons license are the people who believe very strongly in this idea of "the commons."

      Some of them, certainly.

      As far as I can tell, this seems to be an idealistic doctrine which says that the sum total of human creative endeavour is the birthright of every human being...

      I believe you are describing the basis for US copyright law. The "commons" is more usually taken to refer to that set of resources, both material and intellectual, that may be freely exploited in some way by everyone for the benefit of all.

      ...and that everybody should ideally have access to every creative work (either now, or at some point in the future). This ideology...

      I suppose you could describe it as an "ideology", although the word has extremist/marginalist overtones not usually associated with long standing legislation. Still, let us not be needlessly picky...

      ... naturally makes anyone who wants to profit off his/her own creative works tend to bristle.

      I've been known to profit from my own creativity from time to time, so I question the use of the words "anyone" and "naturally". You don't think you might be projecting, just a little here, do you?

      the Creative Commons license seems to mainly appeal to people who want to spread their own creative works...

      No argument there

      ... in some kind of "viral" way.

      Oops, spoke too soon. Hey, maybe they just made something nice and wanted to let others enjoy it without surrendering the work into the public domain. That isn't such a complicated concept. I think we can understand it without recourse to micro-organisms.

      The license is a public statement: Go ahead and take this, use it, don't worry about it, I won't sue you. (And there may be a couple of additional clauses, such as "I won't sue you unless you try to profit from it.")

      When you put it like that, you make it sound just like the EULA for the copy of Windows that came "free" with my computer. Except of course that the EULA was a lot scarier. And harder to understand. And it had all sorts of nasty stuff hidden away too.

      Still, Slashdot's then thousand corporate trolls can't all be wrong, and they've assured us time and again that MS' EULA is fair practice. So I guess that would make the far more permissive CC licence OK as well. Sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander and all that...

      But how do you define "profit"?

      Well, the CC doesn't. What it does have is a non-commercial clause which the licensor may elect to include in a licence. The CC defines "non-commercial" to mean that the work is not licenced for commercial distribution. That's about as straight forward as it gets.

      If nobody would benefit in any way from the use of your work, then why would they want to use it in the first place? To my mind, benefit and profit are synonymous here.

      You've already distorted the motivations of the CC supporters and misrepresented the CC's "non-commercial" clause as "not for profit". Now all you need do is redefine "profit" to mean "benefit", and you're all set to demolish the CC based upon these same false premises.

      You seem sincere enough, but really this is a classic Straw Man argument

      --
      Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
  22. Speech is active; by Geof · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Two comments jumped out at me in Orlowski's article. The first seems unable to distinguish the exercise of speech from the act of listening:

    One picks up on the Lessig quote, "There's a class of speech that's not possible at all without P2P technologies". Rubbish, says Andy Bright.

    I disagree. With a $20 bill and a trip to Best Buy, or a credit card and a trip to Amazon this class of speech is entirely possible.

    Another article, responding to Orlowski's absurd claim that geeks believe the technology, not the artist, is responsible for creativity, claims that geeks believe:

    That creativity is an unlimited resource, only held back by the limitations of the distribution network and these damn tools. If we could only put video cameras in the hands of every person on the planet, and provide universal access to the results, thousands of new film makers will be discovered.

    Implicit in this rejection is an incredibly elitist conception of creativity as an inborn talent. It's a short step from here to saying it's a waste of time to teach writing (or painting or what have you) because the great writers are born and will write regardless.

    For some geniuses that is surely true. For others, the lack isn't tools but practice: creativity, like most skills, can be improved through use. Easy access to technology helps. Easy access to culture which can be built upon, which building is essential to all art from Shakespeare to Warhol, helps even more. It is this latter lack that Creative Commons targets, and which the $20 for "speech" (i.e. passive listening) doesn't address. But these folks are too blinded by the silly "blue LEDs" to see past the technology.

  23. The new worlds paint brush by SiliconTrip · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I feel from the article that it appears many people do not see the computer as an artistic tool. The same way a painter sees a brush. A writer a manuscript. A musician an instrument.

    They see it more as a TV, a stereo, a delivery system. They see the computer as the end point of creative media, not the beginning. "So DRM must be enforced in the end point."

    But to many of us techno-utopians who have grown up around computers and could see the machine without limitations, DRM presents a threat to our creativity. It limits what we consider a limitless machine.

    Would a painter feel threatened if some colour paints would not work with his/her paint brush?
    Would a musician feel threatened if certain rhythms and melodies could not be played?

    I see my computer not as a burden for working life, but a portfolio and canvas of all my creativity.

    The article seems to think they know 'us techno-utopians' but I feel that I have been misrepresented.

    --
    "self confessed techno-utopian computer artist"

    1. Re:The new worlds paint brush by Mant · · Score: 1

      Seems to me he was on the money, as the impression I got was that he sees 'techno-utopians' as seeing their computer as artistic tools, but was arguing most people don't.

      I'm not sure I agree, I think most people are getting used to CGI, and know computers can make images an music.

      I think people regard it as an artistic tool when it is used to create new things, but don't regard mixes and mashups as creative. Most people don't see taking part of someones song or picture on a part with particular notes or colours.

    2. Re:The new worlds paint brush by SiliconTrip · · Score: 1

      That's the next question. What defines something as creativity?

      "Most people don't see taking part of someones song or picture on a part with particular notes or colours."

      But at the fundamental level it is the same.

      My mother is a professional painting artist and uses collage alot in her work. No one says that her work isn't original creativity despite it containing part of someone elses picture.

      I produce video clips of events I've been involved with (drift and track days) by taking someone elses music, and syncing my footage with it, sometimes I pad out the gaps with video downloaded from the net. Would most people regard this as creative?

      Fonts are copyright, so are considered creative, but anyone with a pen and a steady hand could draw them and people use many in everyday life without thinking about it.

      What about some of the sounds in my synthesizer? Many are not natural sounds or recordings of other instruments. Someone had to create that sound and that is creative to me. Yet I could write a whole musical score using that sound (as well as other sounds).

      What about those pearl paints that change colour depending on the angle of light? Someone had to come up with the idea to be able to do that, is that creative? It's just a paint.

      The lines between the elements that make up creativity and creativity itself are blurred. One mans masterpiece is another mans ink dot.

      I feel that people should not get upset (and impliment technology to prevent it) about their work being used to create something larger.

      Didn't Newton say something about standing on the shoulders of giants. Same goes for creativity.

  24. all contracts by shareme · · Score: 0

    Ahem, I see you smoking MS weed again.. All EULA contracts are equally enforceable both in the US, Europe, and etc.. CC is an EULA contract on topof a copyright.. The reason thye UELa contract has to be ther is to , get this, enforce legally teh copyright of the creator of the work.. Specifc works have no EULA and thus are often harder to enforce.. for example oh lets say Music? Some are easier to enforce and require no EULA in specifc geographical areas.. for example book coprights seem to be protected quite well by the Berne Copyright treaty that most Countires signed but uneforceable in countries that did not ratify that treaty.. Of course if the /. scoring sytem was working..none of what I say should make any sense to you.. But, /. has been wrong before..

    --
    Fred Grott(aka shareme) http://mobilebytes.wordpress.com
    1. Re:all contracts by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      [delete rant about proper spelling, punctuation, and capitalization, along with a WTF regarding your use of the "double period".]

      1) A Creative Commons license is not an EULA. The Creative Commons licenses does not say anything about how the end user can use the work being licensed. Like the GPL, the CC licenses only grant additional rights to potential redistributors, which is a distinct group.

      2) Not all EULAs are equally enforceable. For example, good luck trying to enforce mine.

      3) An EULA is NOT necessary for enforcing copyright. Quite the contrary, EULAs are generally where people shove stuff that they know damned well wouldn't be enforceable under simple copyright.

      4) Okay, I have to know. What is it with those double-periods?

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

  25. Groklaw and Wikipedia are both major works by Generalisimo+Zang · · Score: 2, Informative

    www.groklaw.net (Groklaw)

    It is a VERY major work, and it's under the Creative Commons liscense.

    en.wikipedia.org (Wikipedia)

    It is also a VERY major work, and is also under the Creative Commons liscense.

    So.. um, you're not only a bad bad AC, but you're also a wrong, wrong AC :P

    1. Re:Groklaw and Wikipedia are both major works by Byzantine · · Score: 1

      **BUZZ** Thank you for playing, but I believe you're incorrect. :)

      According to Wikipedia, it's licensed under the GNU FDL, which I believe isn't precisely the same thing.

      Of course, I could be wrong: this isn't my forte, so please correct me if I've gone astray.

  26. Has no one ever heard of a Straw Man Argument???? by Great_Jehovah · · Score: 1

    Good lord. This article and its predecessor are nothing but "these people hold such-and-such-overly-simplified-obviously-stupid opinion. Aren't they stupid simpletons who just want to pirate the golden dripping of Awesome Artists?"

    Whatever. This guy has a stick up his ass. Ignore him. CC is it's own thing for it's own class of people. They should sink or swim on their own without the hindrance of stupid "pundits" like this.

  27. MOD PARENT UP =) by plasmacutter · · Score: 1

    This is the most concise and deep description of the true nature of the divide between true e-generation members and so called "representatives and lawmakers". I know at least 4 people directly who use thier computers to create mashups, remixes, political satire, funny shorts, parodies, etc. I refuse to divulge details, but I know this kind of personal creativity with computers has already begun to spill into main stream tv, and this is all threatened by stupid old men who see computers as nothing more than a glorified TV rather than the limitless tool for creativity it really is.

    --
    VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
  28. There is a reason that some despise the CC... by Generalisimo+Zang · · Score: 4, Interesting

    So *what* is the big deal with these guys that they so despise CC and act like it is something that it is not? I want to think it is more then trolling for hits, but there doesn't seem to be any other motive that I can tell...

    The point is that those whose livelihoods depend upon acting as go-betweens between the creators of "IP", and the consumers of "IP", feel threatened by the possibilities of the internet in general, and the FOSS movement in particular.

    For two thousand years, creative people wrote books. THey wrote these books because they wanted to write them, and because they wanted people to read them.

    How much money do you think Livy made for writing "Discourses"? How much money did Julius Ceasar make from writing "The Gallic War", and "The Cival War"? How much did Machiavelli make from having written "The Prince"?

    In all three cases, the answer is not very much. They didn't write those books to make money from renting out puplication rights... they each had other motives that did not involve money.

    So now we fast-forward to 2005, where there is an ingrained cultural meme that ALL human interaction MUST be motivated by the exchange of folding money... except there are many creative people who have the same motives that the authors and creators of past centuries had. Thier motives for writing a book, or a play, or a computer program may not involve money.

    This, of course, is very worrisome to those whose entire existence is predicated upon their ability to stick themselves inbetween creators and viewers, and to leech a living from that position.

    The leeches see that their two-century-long free lunch on the blood of creative people may soon be coming to an end.

    So they wiggle and whine about any liscense that cuts them out of the transaction. Oh, boo hoo hoo, the GPL will end the world, or boo hoo hoo, the CC liscense will end all existence. Heh, and for the leech-like middlemen, they're correct :)

    1. Re:There is a reason that some despise the CC... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Great examples. I look forward to a brave new world along your lines where the only thing in the library is Bill Gate's "The Road Ahead", because all books are created by idle rich guys that can afford the time it costs to write and publish themselves. Meanwhile, everyone else with a creative thought is parked behind a fryer at McDonalds serving up burgers to Bill, because they can't make a dime on their writing, yet still have to earn a living.

    2. Re:There is a reason that some despise the CC... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, Machiavelli wrote the 'The Prince' because he wanted a job.

  29. Bizarro World with Andrew Orlowski by ChaosDiscord · · Score: 1

    Orlowski seems to inhabit a world of his own.

    One of Orlowski's earlier articles claimed that Gary Trudeau was specifically lampooning the Creative Commons in Doonesbury. I wrote the editors to point out that the comics in question were two years old, and that I found it highly unlikely that Gary Trudeau had even heard about a movement that was at the time only six months old. Unsurprisingly my mail was forwarded on to Orlowski. More surprising was the bizarre response I got from Orlowski.

    In his response, he claimed that the article in question was written by somebody else and that he didn't know what to make of it. I pointed out that my message was a standard angry letter to the editor on a story he wrote and that he should take it as such. His response was further disconnected, apparently having no idea what was being discussed and asking how he could help me.

    Perhaps some inner hatred of the Creative Commons has driven Orlowski off the deep end?

  30. Over Mickey Mouse's public domain dead body by pelrun · · Score: 1

    As long as Disney has enough money to bribe^H^H^H^H^Hlobby Congress into extending the copyright term every time Mickey Mouse's copyright is about to expire, then GNU/Linux is going to be copyright protected for the forseeable future.

    Ok, so it'll probably happen one day, but by then I'll be long dead.

  31. BEEP, sorry you got it wrong the correct answer is by serialdogma · · Score: 1

    Quote from Wikipedia "All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License".
    Think you might of got that 2nd one wrong?

  32. Re:BEEP, sorry you got it wrong the correct answer by Raul654 · · Score: 1

    You are correct that the text (excluding quotations, which are copyrighted and an almost-universally accepted form of fair use/fair dealing) is available under the GNU free documentation license.

    However, other media types (pictures, sounds, movies) can be under other licenses. In my experience, the most common license for those types of files is the GFDL, and CC-by-SA is the second most common. Public domain (which is not a license) is also fairly common, mostly thanks to the US government (nearly all work produced by/for the US Gov't is public domain)

    --A Wikipedia Administrator

    --


    To make laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law into contempt.
    --E.C. Stanton
  33. FUDding CC? by OohAhh · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Well I agree it does look like that on the face of it. Certainly the arguments resemble the ones used against the GPL. Comoditise the product and it's value is undermined universally. That might have some small validity with software, but not creative or information content, eg. journalism.

    There are great writers, there are even great journalists. Their writing and insights will be sort out because of the quality of the writing or the deeper understanding gained by reading it. Because of this their work will always have an intrinsic value.

    Then, of course, there are the hacks. People with no special talent or deep knowledge. In fact a fairly ordinary person with some experience and maybe some training. Given that and the right information there are plenty of people that could do just as well. OK, so most CC isn't going to be even that good, but some of it undoutedly will be. There are plenty of hacks that may be given quite a run for their money by CC material.

    So as I see it there is FUD, yes. Not just the stuff people like Andrew Orlowski are trying to spread, but their own. Their doubt in their own ability, their uncertainty over a continuing market, and ultimately their fear.

    1. Re:FUDding CC? by Vo0k · · Score: 1

      Tell you what? The crappier the author, the more they cry "Copying forbidden! All rights reserved! All characters, ideas, design, everything (c) ME, now and forever!"
      People most likely to release at least some of their works freely are usually quality artists.

      --
      Anagram("United States of America") == "Dine out, taste a Mac, fries"
  34. I've already been paid by the time I release it... by kirkjobsluder · · Score: 1

    I think that what he forgets is there are entire economies of creative works that don't depend on collecting the five cents in royalties on every copy. I get a grant from the government to do some research. I get a grant from a school system to design a course. I a contract to create some materials.

    Nobody sees my work until I've been paid for my time. I don't care about collecting royalties because by the time anything makes it out into the world, I've moved on to the next project.

  35. The Lone Ranger And Clayton Moore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
    I showing my age, here but I've used this example for non-geeks and it works pretty well... When I was a kid, I used to watch Lone Ranger reruns on television. My heart still races when I hear the beginning strains of "The William Tell Overture". To me, Clayton Moore, the actor who played the character in the shorts, the movies and the radio *was* the Lone Ranger. Fast forward a few decades, Clayton Moore is an old man and he makes a living dressing up and appearing in character - until MCA/Universal served him w/papers making him stop because they owned the property and they were making a new Lone Ranger movie. It broke his heart. I remember interviews with Clayton Moore and he'd get choked up over not being allowed to wear the mask. He resorted to wearing huge dark sunglasses like you see old people wearing when they drive their Buicks.

    When Valenti, that MPAA shill, was on the news touting extending copyright and copy-protection, he often asked "Who does it hurt?" It hurt Clayton Moore. It hurt the Lone Ranger.

    Actors may not originate the roles they play, but they bring a lot to the table if you're talking about creativity. No, they don't own the characters they play. I believe the Creative Commons movement is a reaction by creators of "intellectual property" against the owners of said property.

    Creating isn't "all about the benjamins", but ownership most assuredly is.

  36. Ooops. Sorry.. 1 out of 2 ain't bad ;) by Generalisimo+Zang · · Score: 1

    Guess I was wrong about Wikipedia's liscense.

    But, um... Groklaw is under a Creative Commons liscense, and it's pretty large and well-done.

  37. God bless Andy Toone! by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Where would we be without this guy to deride Wikipeds and Creative Commons fans as self-important, talentless nobodies who just don't comprehend that the truly talented people will not contribute to their culture unless tricked into it by the siren song of the Almighty Buck?

    Apparently, Toone is one of the handful of people willing to provide Orlowski with deliciously inflammatory quotes at a moment's notice. From this article:
    "Personally I'm happy to accept their information on Klingons as being authoritative," writes Andy Toone. "However, the people who get overexcited about the social effects of Wiki/ Blogs/ Open Source seem to be far less reliable when it comes to the economics and practicalities of providing time, effort and information to such projects."
    Sure, Wikipedia has been an unmitigated economic disaster, chewing up hundreds of millions in startup capital while providing no benefit to anybody... no, wait. That was pets.com.

    When Toone says, "[geeks think] that the geek experience somehow supplants all previous culture and creative expression," it's clear that he is either making stuff up to get under peoples' skins, or is basing his impressions on the extreme fringe. Either way, he and Orlowski both seem to feel personally threatened by the idea of open culture. My theory is that they've both got too much invested in the idea that "quality is paid for". For Orlowski, the fact that he gets paid to write his drivel is the very thing that raises it above the drivel unpaid masses to the level of "Good Culture". So if a significant number of people prefer the work of "amateurs", then what is it that gives him a right to a paycheck?

    Okay, nothing good comes from armchair psychoanalysis. But if you saw the hatchet job he did on Lessig, well, the bastard deserves far worse.
    --

    You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

  38. As a service to our readers... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    [The following is a reposting, edited for clarity by an unaffiliated reader. Although every effort was made to keep the original content and meaning intact, you may still wish to read the original post to be sure you are taking the post in its correct context... if you can.]

    Ahem, I see you've been smoking MS weed again...

    All EULA contracts are equally enforceable both in the US, Europe, etc. CC is an EULA contract on top of a copyright. The reason the EULA contract has to be there is to-- get this-- legally enforce the creator's copyright on the work.

    Some works have no EULA, so licenses are often harder to enforce. For example: Music. Some are easier to enforce and require no EULA in certain jurisdictions book copyrights, for example, seem to be protected quite well by the Berne Copyright treaty that most Countires signed (however, it is uneforceable in countries that did not ratify that treaty).

    Of course, if the /. scoring system was working none of what I say should make any sense to you. But, /. has been wrong before.

  39. Did Lessig personally insult Orlowski? by ChaosDiscord · · Score: 1

    Did Lawrence Lessig personally insult Orlowski? Did the Creative Commons run over Orlowski's dog? Because I can't think of any rational reason for Orlowski's bitterness toward the Creative Commons. I like the Register, I like it's aggressive, cynical point of view. And some people are promising that the Creative Commons is The Ultimate Answer that will Heal the Sick. They deserve some mocking. But to generalize a few overly enthusiatic supportors into a general statement about Creative Commons is stupid. Worse, he makes up entirely straw man arguments, like CC supports are just looking for a thin excuse to make infringing copys of copyrighted works. Congrats on missing the point; you might as well accuse Stallman of starting the Free Software Foundation because he wants an excuse to make copies of Microsoft Office. Maybe the supporters do want things to be Free, but so what? They've chosen to do so honestly, by making their own work free to varying extents. Orlowski's coverage normally doesn't bother me, but when he gets on the Creative Commons he steps into la-la land. Feh.

  40. Here is where we disagree by elucido · · Score: 1, Interesting

    "Engineering recipes, or source code, aren't the same as works of art."

    I believe science IS art. Art IS science, and anyone who cannot see the connection most likely isnt neither a scientist or artist. Einstien's formula was art, his methods were scientific. Source code is art, the methods, formulas, and algorithms are the science.

    When I listen to music I listen with the exact same critical ear and attention to detail that I give to sourcecode I'm reading.

    Second, music is not a business, hacking is not a business, its an art first and a business second because all the elite programmers, hackers and composers were both artists and scientists. Bach was to music what Carmack is to programming and as Einstein was to physics. They used science to create works of art.

    We need to promote sci-art. Mixing science and art.

    1. Re:Here is where we disagree by Mant · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You may believe it, but I don't think many people do. Sometimes the results of science may be elegant such that a scientist may appreciate it on a aesthetic level.

      Discovering something elegant doesn't seem to me the same process as creating something. The scientist isn't expressing something in the same way and science is bound by trying to model the universe, you can't change the equation to express something different.

      So for me science completely fails to be art, however much I may admire the results.

      Art can be created using science, or the results of science (technology) but plenty of art can be about expressing emotions. I studied theory of music, but many of my favourite songs are three cords and voice laden with emotion. I'll take the lyrical over the mathematical in music every time.

      I write code, I can appricate the craft of a well written algorithm, but that doesn't make it art (to me, since art is such a subjective term).

    2. Re:Here is where we disagree by Drooling+Iguana · · Score: 1

      Science is most certainly not an art. Art is creative while science is descriptive. An artist is in the business of creating new things, new paintings, new sculptures, new pieces of music, etc., while a scientist is in the business of describing an already existing universe. Given a similar task, two ideal artists working idependantly would invariably produce different works, while two ideal scientists studying the same phenomenon would, under ideal conditions, always arrive at the same conclusions, defined by the truth about how that phenomenon operates.

      --
      ... I'm addicted to placebos
    3. Re:Here is where we disagree by drakaan · · Score: 1

      Discovering something elegant doesn't seem to me the same process as creating something. The scientist isn't expressing something in the same way and science is bound by trying to model the universe, you can't change the equation to express something different.

      That's easy to agree with, but doesn't marry science and writing code in some unextricable way.

      If you look at programming through a scientist's eyes (in your definition), anything beyond binary instructions would be a pointless abstraction.

      A programmer choosing different abstractions (programming languages) to create software is not a scientific necessity...in most programming languages, you can accomplish the same tasks as in the others, albeit with differing levels of difficulty. Choosing a programming language is choosing a tool by which to create your work.

      Programming (writing software code) using a language other than that understood by the machine that the code will run on is an art. There are multiple ways to approach most tasks, and there are multiple aesthetic ideals that a programmer can aspire to. The difference between an obfuscated Perl code snippet and a web server written in Visual Basic (hey, you *could* do it) are probably at opposite ends of the spectrum in one aspect. A "Hello World" in a DOS batch file, and the Linux kernel are at opposite ends in another aspect.

      Artists and programmers both begin with an idea, work out a concept, use their own favorite techniques and tools, and create something unique, while occassionally borrowing from the works of others in ways both large and small.

      Appreciating the craft of a well-written algorithm is like appreciating the glint of light in the eye of a painted face. The glint of light isn't art, it's an example of the artist's skill, and it's part of the work.

      If you can appreciate 3 chords and an emotion-laden voice, have you ever appreciated a crafty shell script?

      Sure, music, poetry, and C++ have many differences, but the works that are produced in their respective spheres are equally worthy of being called "art", some good, some bad.

      --
      "Murphy was an optimist" - O'Toole's commentary on Murphy's Law
  41. "Remix Culture" by Jonathan · · Score: 1

    Orlowski seems to be thinking of the worth of reusing existing works solely from the perspective of music, and he seems to be asserting that it is old news and only computer nerds don't know about it. Frankly, I couldn't care less about "remixed songs", which I agree is not much more than a dated gimmick; I think it is far more important to allow free access to significant literary works. For example, it might be interesting to write a book set in Middle Earth but presenting it from the Orcs' perspective, much like Gregory Maguire's retelling of the Wizard of Oz from the witch's perspective. In a sane world, there would be no problem with that, but in reality the Tolkien Estate ("protecting the rights" of a man dead 30 years ago) probably would either halt publication or demand a hefty fee.

    1. Re:"Remix Culture" by plasmacutter · · Score: 1

      I see.. remixes are nothing more than a dated gimmick eh? I have at least 2 dozen remixes by my friends of artists such as haujobb and depeche mode. The remixes are good, reflective, eclectic, urban. Then there are those entire genres of rap, r&b, industrial, and techno which are both enriched and virtually dependent on the ability to sample. My friend mixes industrial and does a good job. He's local, never reaches a scale large enough to warrant contacting and reconciling with rightsholders about sampling, which should be protected under fair use. Of course, these generes and the people who are part of them are just "dated gimmick"s

      --
      VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
  42. Revoking the irrevokable by jhdevos · · Score: 1
    Yet one interesting point he throws out has me pondering, is a Creative Commons License permanently irrevocable once it's put out there?"
    Wow, are you planning to pull an SCO? Revoking a licence which the licence says is 'irrevokable', then suing someone for copyright-infringement? At least, that's what the SCO-IBM case was about for some time, I really don't remember what it's about now, It has changed too often.

    But still, it illustrates that the fact this licence is irrevokable is a very good thing. You don't want something like that happen to you.

    Jan

  43. FTA... by Vo0k · · Score: 2

    Better communications have all but removed some hideous inequities. It's no longer the case, for example, that Northern Soul artists were dying in poverty ignorant of the fact that thousands of people were celebrating their music on the other side of the Atlantic at all night parties.

    Well, nowadays orthern Soul artists were dying in poverty absolutely aware of the fact that thousands of people are celebrating their music on the other side of the Atlantic at all night parties. Communication transfers information. Not legal rights associated with it. And money follow the legaleese transfer channels, not data transfer channels.

    --
    Anagram("United States of America") == "Dine out, taste a Mac, fries"
  44. Andrew O is not a troll, but.. by christian.einfeldt · · Score: 2, Informative

    ...he does like complex solutions and is suspicious of simple, elegant solutions. He also likes getting more readers for El Reg. He is a business guy, ultimately, and his biz is bringing eyeballs to El Reg.

    Andrew and I both live in SF. I met him for lunch one day at a pasta restaurant on Kearny between Bush and Pine. We talked about a film I'm producing, the Digital Tipping Point, which is a film about the free open source software's part in the cultural benefits of bringing more minds on line. My point was that bringing more minds on line means, more noise, but more quality creativity, too.
    In that discussion, he panned both Lessig and Clayton Christensen, both of whom are influential in the upcoming DTP film. He doesn't like what he views as "economic determinism." He thought that the cc relies too heavily on the belief that more access to technology will create more art works of genuine value. And he thought that Harvard Biz Prof Clayton Christensen's work was too simplistic and a form of economic determinism. He actually became quite peeved at Christensen's line of thinking during our discussion. He kept insisting that both Christensen and Lessig are pushing simplistic ideas, and I kept thinking to myself that he had not spent enough time trying to understand Christensen and Lessig, and was dismissing them merely because they both are popular now.

    I also kept thinking to myself that Andrew values complex ideas, and I think that he believes that as a journalist, he needs to very visibly display his independence of thought for fear of being labeled a party-line thinker.

    Ultimately, it is there that Andrew makes his greatest mistake, IMHO. He's so eager to display his independence of thought that he sometimes will have a knee-jerk reaction against popular ideas, such as the cc or Christensen's theory of disruptive technologies.

    So no, Andrew was not trolling with his two stories on the cc. That was the real Andrew O, IMHO. I like Andrew's writing a great deal. I think that he's often right on target, and quite funny. I also think that he is overly concerned about appearing to be an independent thinker.

    So Andrew, please relax. You often write great stuff, but this rant about the cc is not one of your best pieces. Please let it drop and move on to something else.

    Christian Einfeldt

  45. What is his grudge? by tod_miller · · Score: 1

    And who is paying him? I really like his idea of living in a world where I cannot give people rights to use my work freely. (and optionally stop people selling it for profit).

    CC has some very good well described licenses, that are brilliant, and I hope sxc.hu uses the most open one as its default, and deviantart.com also incorporates it.

    --
    #hostfile 0.0.0.0 primidi.com 0.0.0.0 www.primidi.com 0.0.0.0 radio.weblogs.com
    1. Re:What is his grudge? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think his grudge is that communism doesn't work.

  46. This guy just doesn't get it. by Vo0k · · Score: 1

    "Want to use a sample? Go ahead and use it. With a nudge and a wink, you'll probably get away with it. If you reach number one with that sample, expect to hear from the original artist."

    No. Expect to hear from the labels' lawyer. And prepare to pay thrice what you got from that piece, even if that was just one sample in a big original work. If there's a chance for money to be had from someone who did something vaguely like what someone else did, be sure someone will come to claim them. By copyrigt fees, by settlements or by lawsuits, not necessarily in that order.

    "Beethoven doesn't need to be re-mixed - he needs a good orchestra."
    So that means, that if I do remix Beethoven nevertheless, his grand-grand-grandchildren are entitled to sue me, because it was their grandpa's heritage, so I owe them money? If something according to someone, isn't needed (and to someone else, is), should it be forbidden by law?

    "Defenders of the licensing approach say it simply adds to the range of choices an artist has available to them"
    More importantly, it removes from the pool an artist is forbidden to use. Nowadays it's getting harder to find an original, uncharted, untouched territory. More and more often you stumble upon repetitions, intentional or not.

    "And why the reluctance to think about social agreements that reward the gifted people who give us such pleasure?"
    It's reluctance to reward people who create crap AND stop really creative people from giving us such pleasure. Talent should be rewarded. Not just "being somewhere around there first".

    "Why the recourse to mechanism - the need to have every T crossed, every i dotted, and a license for every possible occasion?"
    Because if you don't, someone else will, and then they have all the legal system behind them to screw you as they only desire.

    "Finding a way to reward creators, which the project doesn't even attempt to address, remains more urgent as ever."
    Yes, it does. Now, when problem of protecting the creators from unjustly punishment has been solved by CC.

    --
    Anagram("United States of America") == "Dine out, taste a Mac, fries"
  47. Re:Same Failed Arguments As Those Against Open Sou by Mant · · Score: 1

    Mr. Orlowski's arguments are the same ones as get trotted out time and again against open source. Regardless of whether you think open source is awesome or overrated, it's tough to argue that open source is irrelevant, which is how Mr. Orlowski paints the Creative Commons.

    Well, from what I got from the article the writer thinks that the problem with the CC crowd is they think of creative work a lot like code, and think a solution that works for code will work for artistic works.

    If you accept that, then pointing out these arguments did work for Open Source doesn't really help you, since you have already accepted the situation is different. So Open Source can be relevant, but the Creative Commons may not be.

  48. COPYRIGHT != LICENSE by tod_miller · · Score: 1

    Copyright is great, I have it you have it, we all have it!

    Hello Copyright, my name is license, in case you haven't noticed we are not the same thing, now fuck off 'bloggers' who get 'jobs' writing 'articles' with names like Dvorak - THINK before you write.

    Once again, for those at the back:

    Copyright != License!

    Write it down.

    (In case that wasn't enough I am implying that Creative commons gives licenses for people to class for their copyrights works. Creative commons has nothing to do with copyright, merely licensing. And as Dvorak spasses on about, current copyright laws do not actually address licensing, partly due to the fact that they are copyright laws. Not licenses.)

    Captain parenthesis.

    I will continue: thanks to a world of meaningless words (blog, podcasting) people who perpetuate this bs words are incapable of the basic rudimentary deducations in langage, such as copyright, and license.

    So, in closing: Creative Commons: Public Domain

    While this is 'trendy', it also completes the set, and public domain is a 'license' and furthermore, they provide (see earlier) the service I nodded to: they provide the system that someone can link what to the explaination of the license, and also a few words to help someone convey they are the author and they are signing over this work.

    OK. Lets all listen to a pod-fucking-cast of the blog shall we? troll flamebait? I don't care, this is releases under a CC 2.0 share a like license.

    --
    #hostfile 0.0.0.0 primidi.com 0.0.0.0 www.primidi.com 0.0.0.0 radio.weblogs.com
  49. Money, Obviously by joshdick · · Score: 1

    These guys make a living out of publishing attacks on things they don't understand. It's just all money to them.

  50. Other options by archipunk · · Score: 1
    There is also a Founders' Copyright through Creative Commons that gives a term of 14 or 28 years.
    Rather than adopting a standard U.S. copyright that will last in excess of 70 years after the author's lifetime, the Creative Commons and a contributor will enter into a contract to guarantee that the relevant creative work will enter the public domain after 14 years, unless the author chooses to extend for another 14. To re-create the functionality of a 14- or 28-year copyright, the contributor will sell the copyright to Creative Commons for $1.00, at which point Creative Commons will give the contributor an exclusive license to the work for 14 (or 28) years. During this period, Creative Commons will list all works under the Founders' Copyright, along with each projected public domain liberation date, in an online registry.

    This basically deeds the rights to the Creative Commons, who then license it back to you for a period of time, after which they will deed it to the public domain.

    So, through the Creative Commons, a fully exploitable, but more reasonably termed option also exists.

  51. Using CC to make money by SFEley · · Score: 1
    Here's the response I just sent Orlowski:

    I produce a short fiction podcast called Escape Pod. We buy science fiction and fantasy stories from authors, narrate them, and release them on the Web. Our authors receive a real contract for nonexclusive audio rights, and get a real check. Our listeners get free content. We release our MP3 files under a Creative Commons license. (Attribution/non-commercial/no-derivatives.)

    In turn we ask for donations. Within three months, we were bringing in more money in donations than we had paid for stories. We're putting that money back into the podcast.

    My choice to use a CC license was not based on any sort of idealism or geek philosophy. It was a business decision: I wanted the audio files to be distributed as widely as possible, to grow our audience and our donor base as large as possible. CC is a useful shorthand to encourage that sharing while making it clear that people can't alter the content (our authors still have copyright) and they can't sell it without our involvement.

    It's impractical to charge money for a podcast, and I don't intend to try. Giving it away and asking for money, however, has worked out very well for us. Creative Commons doesn't make that possible, but it facilitates it. It makes my life easier by not forcing me to write the necessary legal boilerplate on my own, and by allowing me to communicate our terms in a few phrases that many people understand.

    So that's how CC has been useful to me. No "theory of art" or any such fluff: it's just about putting out content that people enjoy, and finding a way to make back what we put into it.

    --
    ESCAPE POD - The Science Fiction Podcast Magazine
  52. How is it any different? by elucido · · Score: 1

    How is writing code any different from writing poetry or composing music? Thats code too and people consider that art, why?

  53. GP is a troll (and not a very good one, at that) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    where'd you cut and paste it from?

    She got it from capmag.com

    This troll follows a pattern : cut&paste some hard-right verbiage and slip in a reference to slashdot. Sad that at least one moderator has blown points on this 'tard.

  54. about CC and things that suck by N3wsByt3 · · Score: 1

    "The whole point of sharing something with a Creative Commons license is to allow other people to build upon work that you've created, resulting in more creative works for people to enjoy. "

    Let's see the next paragraph:

    "When you tack on the non-commercial restriction, you're making people jump through hoops to make sure they don't make any money with the new work that has been created."

    Well, then you don't actually forbid to "build upon" works to create "more creative" works, do you? You just forbid commercialising it.

    Sure, this may give problems in some circumstances, but those circumstances are derived from the fact that people wanting to "create upon" them also want a commercial gain. This may or may not be a worthwhile goal, but it DOES indicate that the problem lies not in 'not being able to use the work', but in the commercial aspect of it. This can easily be demonstrated by the fact that, if they make sure it's not for commercial gain, they can use the works to create their 'better' works upon.

    "If someone wants to sell a movie with your song in it, they're either going to have to allow free redistribution of the movie, or ask you how much they have to pay to use your song in the movie."

    So what are you complaining about? The CC (non-commercial) just makes it sure that you can use it when the film goes for free. This does NOT happen when it is 'shared' without any such licence - because then the normal C applies.

    "Both of those options are the goals of someone who is sharing their work."

    You've lost me, there. Certainly, it are not the goals *at the same time*? ;-) One can not be so naive as to suppose that people just 'sharing' their work will never have the tendency to ask for money once they see that it's used. There just is no legal certaintity, so in practise, they are ALWAYS going to be forced to ask for permission, whether they give away their film for free or not. Certainly, there is less chance anyone will do the trouble if it's not commercially beneficial (if the film is a financial succes, for instance), but in the end, copyright(infringement) is NOT dependend of the succes someone has with a product based upon the infringement.

    BTW, I don't think the non-commercial clause forbids *indirect* gain from a cc'ed work in the sense that you describe it. If you actually use the work in your own work, and make that commercial, then, yes, probably. If you set it on a site that has also banners...I don't think so.

    I agree they should make this a bit more clearer, though.

    "If you're aiming for freedom, restricting usage is a bad idea, especially when it's done in such a way that many people choose to restrict usage without being aware of the consequences."

    I can agree to that: the more freedom the better. Yet, one can not deny that 'more free' is also better then totally non-free. In that respect, while a CC NC may be less good then CC without any restrictions, it is still better then regular copyright with all rights reserved.

    --
    --- "To pee or not to pee, that is the question." ---
  55. I'm an author myself... by Generalisimo+Zang · · Score: 1

    I work 40+ hours a week, managing a tiny mon-and-pop retail store.

    I also spent 17 months writing my first Fantasy/Sci-Fi novel, basically during the nights and on my days off.

    I wrote the book, because I *wanted* to write the book, and because I felt a driving need to do something creative and to MAKE something new.

    I'm finishing up the final editing, and having a friend photoshop up a nice cover, and then I'll be publishing it through Lulu.com

    Personally, my choice for liscensing is to use plain-old regular copyright for my first novel... but once I'm done writing my second novel (a sequel), I might consider the idea of offering the first one for free download in order to drive up sales of the second one.

    Who knows? I'll decide on all that, once the second one is done... but since it is MY book, I'll use whatever liscense that I like.

    If I actually make any money on the first book, then great. Maybe I'll be able to eventually support myself from my writing alone. That would be nice.

    But if not, then I'll still continue writing... it'll just take a lot longer for each book to get finished, because the 40-hour-a-week "pay-the-bills" job cuts into my writing time.

    So, yeah, actually making money by writing would be cool, and it'd be nice to actually support myself doing something that I love to do... but money alone isn't the primary motivating factor for creating things.

    At least it isn't for me.

  56. Paternalism...and outdated business models by N3wsByt3 · · Score: 1

    "You're not paying for the plastic of the disc or the bits of the AAC, you're (supposedly) dropping a coin in the performer's hat."

    Ah, yes, but you aren't paying for an *actual* performance, do you? You are paying for a copy of a performance once done, on a shiny piece of platic. Thus, the distortion of how it was in earlier times, and how it is now with recording, has already happend.

    For centuries, even aside the patronage system, the 'performance hat' was filled with coins for the actual performance they did. Thus, they WORKED for it, and were rewarded for the work they did.

    Nowadays, they can - in priciple - perform only once, and have an almost perpetual revenue from it, because of the near-zero cost of copying. Now, when demanding fairness...is that being fair? I don't think so. *I* have to work every day to gain a dime, over and over. I have to offer hard work every day, and get rewarded for that, in comparison. I don't see why people should inherently get an almost perpetual income by doing virtually nothing.

    If they get payed and get 'bread on the table' by actually working for it - for instance by giving life concerts - by all means. This was how it was done for centuries, after all. And how many artists still get payed and afloat today, actually.

    But getting payed over and over again, for doing basically nothing apart from that one recording...pfff, forget it, I don't call that fair. And *THAT* has been the true distortion which shifted the balance - but only from the 20th century onwards. I say: get rid of it, and may artists get payed for their actually performance and work, just like all the rest of us. Artists won't starve to death (i they are any good), rest assured.

    "So back to the point: a CC-C-SA or GPL product requires a re-user to give proper credit, but it also frees them of the responsibility to support the artist they're using."

    Yes, and? The artist agreed to it.

    "And these days (as in all days, really), if you don't have some force of law at your disposal, trusting people to do the right thing is a flawed concept."

    The 'right thing' in this case, is the free use of the CC'ed works under the restrictions you appointed. There is already a law for that: copyright-law. (CC is based on that law too, after all)

    "It's telling the kids the cookie jar is open, and assuming they'll only eat one."

    Now I'm beginning to see the parents' poster reference to 'paternalism'. Look, I've offered work under the CC-A myself and I tell you this: the cookie jar IS open because *I* opened it, it's meant to be open, and everyone can take as much as he wants (which is quite possible with digital copying, which I pointed out earlier). I *DO NOT CARE* if people use my work and don't pay me, in fact, that's just the gest of it. I WANT them to use it, and they don't have to offer me a dime, ever.

    Aside for the attribution, the 'kids' can take as much as they want, the way they want it, at the time they want it, and can becoming stinking rich with it if they can, and still I won't demand them to pay me one lousy eurocent!

    I hope I made it clear, as incomprehensible as it may seem to you: I do not *want* to get any financial compensation for the works I give away. If I wanted that, I wouldn't have given it away. What's so difficult to understand? Why the patronising, as if people that wish to give their stuff under the CC are idiots, who are not aware and consient of what they are doing?

    Your whole reasoning is skewed and biased with the idea that authors always want financial compensation for what they create. You're knowledge of artists is seriously screwed, if you think that. I repeat: we have no problems with an open cookie jar; we WANT it to be open, and we WANT 'the kids' to take as much as they want. That's the wole point of it, actually.

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    --- "To pee or not to pee, that is the question." ---
    1. Re:Paternalism...and outdated business models by MrAndrews · · Score: 1

      Why the patronising, as if people that wish to give their stuff under the CC are idiots, who are not aware and consient of what they are doing?

      Well, in many cases, I'm sure they are fully aware of what they're doing. In that respect, I'm mostly worried that well-intentioned people don't live with a misconception about what they're actually doing with CC-SA. If you staked a good part of your livelihood on a false premise, you could get burned. But that's not the case with you, obviously.

      Artists do what they do for the love of it, not for the money. But the money is what lets them keep doing it... they either work 40 hours weeks and come home to be a hobbyist artist, or they make a living off their art. But in neither situation are they necessarily in favour or opposed to compensation for their art... so yes, I can't generalize a group like that, assuming everyone cares about the pennies here and there.

      But here's what still confuses me: why is it that some folks intentionally and deliberately overlay a vow of poverty on top of art? I don't mean this in a negative way (if that's how it sounds)... but why would you be so opposed to earning money from your work? It's not like the ideas thrown about would impose hardships on anyone, take away rights, or otherwise impede your ability to spread culture through your works. But I'm getting a lot of very passionate arguments against any sort of compensation AT ALL by the people who stand the most to gain by it. I understand "art for art's sake", but I don't see how it requires swearing off money entirely. Short of some magical Star Trek utopia, money is still needed to survive day-to-day.


      (The only other issue being the question of performance-able art vs medium-based art and how you do a tip jar when the principle result of the art is always digital to begin with, but I won't say any more on that subject cause I've touched on it elsewhere)

  57. I concur by NickFortune · · Score: 1
    Thanks. I did google for it, but obviously made a poor choice of search terms.

    I see what you mean about inserting references to slashdot. That'd almost be clever if it wasn't so pitiful,

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    Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!