One of the many Marinos Papadopoulos' presentation to mEducator project members. Marinos Papadopoulos provided legal advisory upon Copyright & Openness issues to project members (14 EU academic institutions [Schools of Medicine of EU-Members’ Universities] and academic research private entities) for the implementation of the m-Educator project focusing on Multi-type Content Repurposing and Sharing online in Medical Education | Providing legal services—consulting on Intellectual Property & Information Technology issues—to all project members from all EU countries of the m-Educator project. See mEducator at http://www.meducator.net/
The Creative Commons v.3.0 Greece licenses as Free Culture applications for the promotion of Open Educational Resources
1. The Creative Commons v. 3.0 Greece licenses
as Free Culture applications
for the promotion of Open Educational Resources
Dionysia Kallinikou
Associate Professor of Law at Athens Law School, University of Athens
&
Marinos Papadopoulos
Attorney-at-Law J.D., M.Sc., Legal Lead Creative Commons Greece
Dionysia Kallinikou, Marinos Papadopoulos | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
Thessaloniki, May 19-20, 2009
2. The disruptive energies of ICTs & IP networks
The future of the learning process lies in seamless
access to educational resources most of them
available through ICTs and IP networks.
As ICTs and IP networks inherently produce and
communicate copyrighted material in their normal
process of operation, they activate the potential for
copyright infringement.
We need to encourage the existing copyright legal
framework to accommodate the disruptive energies of
ICTs & IP networks in a way that promotes access to
educational resources.
Dionysia Kallinikou, Marinos Papadopoulos | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
Thessaloniki, May 19-20, 2009
3. The Creative Commons Main Idea & Vision
Main idea: the need to ask copyright owners whether
they are willing to agree and give permission in print for
their material to be shared through a generic license
that acts as permission granted in advance.
Vision: a space in the Internet where people could
share and reuse copyrighted material without the fear
of being sued.
Dionysia Kallinikou, Marinos Papadopoulos | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
Thessaloniki, May 19-20, 2009
4. Creative Commons Corporation
2001: Creative Commons Corp. in Mass., USA, by
Lawrence Lessig, Hal Abelson, James Boyle, Michael
Carroll, Eric Eldred, Eric Saltzman, Molly Shaffer Van
Houweling, Diane Cabell.
CC has evolved into a worldwide movement.
CC aims to make copyrighted content more easy to
use and accessible for use by ensuring that content
can be reutilised with a minimum of transactional effort.
Dionysia Kallinikou, Marinos Papadopoulos | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
Thessaloniki, May 19-20, 2009
5. The Creative Commons in Greece
October 13, 2007: CC v.3.0 GREECE licenses are
available through the URL:
http://creativecommons.org/international/gr
Mirroring in Greek: F.A.Q., works on CC, etc., in Greek
through the URL:
http://creativecommons.gr
CC-GR community in FACEBOOK:
Dionysia Kallinikou, Marinos Papadopoulos | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
Thessaloniki, May 19-20, 2009
6. Creative Commons
as tools for Open Educational Resources
CC: the most notable tools in the arsenal of legal
means considered as implementation resources
capable for pushing ahead the agenda of Open
Educational Resources.
While “open” means “without cost”, it does not follow
that it also means “without conditions”.
OER: conditional use of educational resources
available in an information commons.
Dionysia Kallinikou, Marinos Papadopoulos | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
Thessaloniki, May 19-20, 2009
7. Freedoms
freedom to study a work and apply knowledge
offered from it.
freedom to redistribute copies, in whole or in part, of
a work.
freedom to make improvements or other changes,
i.e. to make adaptations, to the content of a work, and
the freedom to release modified copies of it.
Dionysia Kallinikou, Marinos Papadopoulos | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
Thessaloniki, May 19-20, 2009
9. Attribution
The user is free:
1.
To share, i.e. to copy, distribute, and transmit the
licensed work
2.
To remix, i.e. to adapt the licensed work
On condition that the user:
Attributes the work in a manner specified by the
author or licensor
Dionysia Kallinikou, Marinos Papadopoulos | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
Thessaloniki, May 19-20, 2009
10. Attribution + Share-Alike
The user is free:
1. To share, i.e. to copy, distribute, and transmit the
licensed work
2. To remix, i.e. to adapt the licensed work
On condition that the user:
Attributes the work in a manner specified by the
author or licensor.
If he/she alters, transforms, or builds upon the
licensed work, he/she distributes the resulting work
only under the same, similar or compatible license.
Dionysia Kallinikou, Marinos Papadopoulos | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
Thessaloniki, May 19-20, 2009
11. Attribution + Non-Derivatives
The user is free:
1. To share, i.e. to copy, distribute, and transmit the
licensed work
On condition that the user:
Attributes the work in a manner specified by the
author or licensor.
Refrains from any remixing of the work, i.e. does not
attempt to create any derivative works from the
work in the meaning of any effort to alter, transform,
or build upon the licensed work.
Dionysia Kallinikou, Marinos Papadopoulos | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
Thessaloniki, May 19-20, 2009
12. Attribution + Non-Commercial
The user is free:
1. To share, i.e. to copy, distribute, and transmit the
licensed work
2. To remix, i.e. to adapt the licensed work
On condition that the user:
Attributes the work in a manner specified by the
author or licensor.
Refrains from any commercial exploitation of the
work, i.e. does not attempt to use the licensed work
for any commercial purpose.
Dionysia Kallinikou, Marinos Papadopoulos | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
Thessaloniki, May 19-20, 2009
13. Attribution + Non-Commercial + Non-Derivatives
The user is free:
1. To share, i.e. to copy, distribute, and transmit the
licensed work
On condition that the user:
Attributes the work in a manner specified by the
author or licensor.
Refrains from any commercial exploitation of the
work, i.e. does not attempt to use the licensed work
for any commercial purpose.
Refrains from any remixing of the work, i.e. does not
attempt to create any derivative works from the
work in the meaning of any effort to alter, transform,
or build upon the licensed work.
Dionysia Kallinikou, Marinos Papadopoulos | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
Thessaloniki, May 19-20, 2009
14. Attribution + Non-Commercial + Share-Alike
The user is free:
1. To share, i.e. to copy, distribute, and transmit the
licensed work
2. To remix, i.e. to adapt the licensed work
On condition that the user:
Attributes the work in a manner specified by the
author or licensor.
Refrains from any commercial exploitation of the
work, i.e. does not attempt to use the licensed work
for any commercial purpose.
If he/she alters, transforms, or builds upon the
licensed work, he/she distributes the resulting work
only under the same, similar or compatible license.
Dionysia Kallinikou, Marinos Papadopoulos | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
Thessaloniki, May 19-20, 2009
15. Examples of OER using CC: PLoS
Medical literature freely available under CC licenses
Dionysia Kallinikou, Marinos Papadopoulos | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
Thessaloniki, May 19-20, 2009
16. Examples of OER using CC: BioMed Central
Leading Science, Technology and Medicine publisher
which has pioneered the open access publishing
Dionysia Kallinikou, Marinos Papadopoulos | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
Thessaloniki, May 19-20, 2009
17. The Creative Commons v. 3.0 Greece licenses
as Free Culture applications
for the promotion of Open Educational Resources
Thank you!
The presentation is available through the Bulletin Βoard
of the
URL: www.marinos.com.gr |E: marinos@marinos.com.gr
Dionysia Kallinikou, Marinos Papadopoulos | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
Thessaloniki, May 19-20, 2009