KEMBAR78
Hamilton computer club | PPT
Our goal:
“Universal access to research
and education, full participation
in culture.”
More free More restrictive
1
1. Free Licences
2. Projects
First (obvious) point:
It's much easier to share work for
collaboration and reuse.
This means you cannot predict
who will find your work useful.
Media Text Hack
CC Kiwi
There's more content than ever
(and it's easy to find & use).
The technical barriers to access
and reuse are dropping
And people are doing a heap of
amazing work to solve real
problems.
Man from the city, 1971, by Jan Nigro. Purchased 1971. Te Papa
(1971-0036-2)
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 3.0 New Zealand licenceTe Papa
Massed troops at a New Zealand Division thanksgiving service, World
War I. Ref: 1/2-013806-G. No known copyright.
http://natlib.govt.nz/records/22684353NLNZ; WW100
LINZ
National Imagery Photography by LINZ.
Licensed CC-BY
data.linz.govt.nz/data/category/aerial-photos/
Project LATIn
K-12 OER Collaborative
Open Access to Research
Meena Kadri
‘Uttarayan Sunset’ by Meena Kadri.
CC-BY-NC-ND
flickr.com/photos/meanestindian/5357432362/
However, the legal barriers to
dissemination & reuse remain.
Copyright Graffiti Sign by Horia Varlan
CC-BY
https://flic.kr/p/7vBD4TCopyright
Copyright is very restrictive.
Automatic.
Applies online.
No 'c' required.
Lasts for 50 years after death.
Copyright is meant to be a
balancing act between creators,
publishers and the public
But new technologies disrupt
this balance
New behaviours can clash with
old laws.
This can have a chilling effect
on (positive) adaptation and
reuse.
“Grayson, Westley, Stanislaus County...” via US Nat. Archives
No Known Copyright
https://flic.kr/p/8UAPVTWhat to Do?.
Here's the pitch:
Creative Commons licences are
clear, simple, free, legally robust
and you keep your copyright.
Four Licence Elements
Attribution
Non Commercial
No Derivatives
Share Alike
Six Licences
More free More restrictive
Layers
Licence symboll
Human readable
Lawyer readable
Go to creativecommons.org/choose
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1cIW
mV5nCF8o97Nrb8wYZWfQ97FG-
4ylNuXezh2nlBBM/edit
We want to grow the commons in
Aotearoa NZ. We need introduce
CC to thousands of organisations.
We need your help.
New resources to help:
resources.creativecommons.org.nz
–Introductory paper
–Annotated policy
–Brochure
–Poster
–Videos
–Case studies
–And more to come...
creativecommons.org.nz
@cc_aotearoa
matt@creativecommons.org.nz
groups.creativecommons.org.nz
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
International License.

Hamilton computer club