Copyright and Open Access

Recent blog entries tagged with Copyright and Open Access.

Web 2.0 and the perilous seas of content access

Created by Catherine Howell (University of Cambridge) on August 29, 2008

hulu.com error message This post is not about "naming and shaming" innovative web content providers, who are making great strides in bringing interesting multimedia content to end-users.

It's just a small story to remind us that web 2.0 is not always as "accessible" as we think. For educators, perhaps it's a yet another reason to prefer open content. And it reminds us that commercial constraints and IP issues continue to prevent the web from being as "global" a resource as the educational community would like.

This is how I received the error message: browsing Jason Kottke's popular website kottke.org (now described as "a weblog about the liberal arts 2.0") , I noticed that, in a post about the film Koyaanisqatsi, Jason had linked to the popular video site hulu.com.  But I couldn't actually see the video content - all I got was the above message.

New ELI Briefs on Creative Commons Licenses and Open Journaling

Created by Elisa Coghlan (EDUCAUSE) on April 12, 2007

ELI Logo
Find out how Creative Commons copyright licenses offer greater flexibility for both intellectual property owners and users than traditional copyright in the 7 Things You Should Know About Creative Commons brief from the EDUCAUSE Learning Initiative (ELI). Another recent ELI brief, 7 Things You Should Know About Open Journaling, spotlights how open journaling tools can be used for publishing peer-reviewed journals online. Browse the complete 7 Things You Should Know About… monthly series.

An Interview with ARL's Duane Webster

Created by Matt Pasiewicz (EDUCAUSE) on January 06, 2006
In this recording, 33 minute recording, I sit down with Duane Webster, the Executive Director of the Association of Research Libraries (ARL).  Among other things, we'll get his thoughts on digitial preservation, open access, copyright law, and the upcoming Living the Future conference.


This interview is provided courtesy of CNI and was recorded at their 2005 Fall Task Force Meeting.  The Coalition for Networked Information (CNI) is an organization dedicated to supporting the transformative promise of networked information technology for the advancement of scholarly communication and the enrichment of intellectual productivity.  You can learn more about CNI at their web site, http://www.cni.org

An Interview with Steve Wheatley, VP of ACLS

Created by Matt Pasiewicz (EDUCAUSE) on January 06, 2006
In this 14 minute recording, I sit down with Steve Wheatley, a VP with the American Council of Learned Societies.  Listen in as he shares thoughts on the political economy of higher education, cyberinfrastructure, open access, the ACLS Digital Innovation Fellowships, international scholarly exchange and building transnational communitities of scholarship, the ACLS history ebook project.


This interview is provided courtesy of CNI and was recorded at their 2005 Fall Task Force Meeting.  The Coalition for Networked Information (CNI) is an organization dedicated to supporting the transformative promise of networked information technology for the advancement of scholarly communication and the enrichment of intellectual productivity.  You can learn more about CNI at their web site, http://www.cni.org

An Interview with MIT's MacKenzie Smith

Created by Matt Pasiewicz (EDUCAUSE) on December 16, 2005
In this podcast, I speak with MIT's McKenzie Smith about the Science Commons, governance of DSpace, The MIT Libraries' investigation of Semantic Web technology via their SIMILE project, grid computing vis-a-vis the SDSC Storage Resource Broker, and digital preservation.  

To learn more about the activities of the MIT Libraries,
you can view their annual report at the url below:
http://libraries.mit.edu/about/annual/ar05/technology.html


This interview is provided courtesy of CNI and was recorded at their 2005 Fall Task Force Meeting.  The Coalition for Networked Information (CNI) is an organization dedicated to supporting the transformative promise of networked information technology for the advancement of scholarly communication and the enrichment of intellectual productivity.  You can learn more about CNI at their web site, http://www.cni.org