Media News - Thursday, June 30, 2011
Copyright group Creative Commons targets web users
A campaign has been launched to help people avoid breaking the law when
they post pictures, music and videos online. Copyright group Creative Commons has published a guide to identifying
material that can be used freely without getting sued. It is also advises individuals how to protect content they have made
themselves. Some legal experts say that the system is a stop-gap measure and want to
see copyright laws radically reformed. Around 500 million pieces of work are currently covered by Creative
Commons. The free-to-use legal licenses add a range of protections to content.
At one end of the scale, a rights holder can chose to share their
property with anyone, and let them do what they like with it.
Stricter versions of the licences protect material from being
manipulated or used for commercial purposes. Creative Commons' chief of staff, Lisa Green said that the campaign was
partly aimed at combating the myth that it supported "giving everything
away for free". "Rather than giving away, mostly we talk about enabling legal sharing
and enabling remix," she said. While many legal observers have praised the efforts of Creative Commons
to make copyright more accessible, they point out that the system is not
without its flaws. Creative Commons has also been criticised as a system which masquerades
as creating a common pool of content, while leaving individual rights
holders the ability to alter the terms of sharing at will. (BBC News)
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