ICT4D Blog

Open Education 2006 (I): eduCommons and Creative Commons

Here come my notes on the Open Education 2006: Community, Culture, and Content that we are attending:

Wednesday, September 27, 2006
Welcome and Keynote

Welcome and eduCommons 2.1.0 Launch
David Wiley, COSL/Utah State University

David presents the upcoming version of eduCommons, the OpenCourseWare management system designed specifically to support OpenCourseWare.

Some features:

What is Commercial Use? The Line Between Commercial & Non Commercial
Mia Garlick, Creative Commons

Short intro abut Creative Commons

Rapid growth of adoption (linkback measuring) from 12/2005 on.
Trending to more flexible? decreasing noncommercial, decreasing no derivatives, decreasing share alike.
Successful court case decision in the Netherlands.
CC searchers: Yahoo, Google, Flickr, blip.tv
MS Office CC add-in

Next step: let people be aware that CC is not only good per se but for reuse benefits: if you create content and make it available, some other people might find it useful and be using it.

NonCommercial use

Can I charge for educational content?
What’s my understanding of “open” or “free”?
What is, actually, commercial/noncommercial?

There is an ongoin dicussion in the Creative Commons Wiki on this issue: http://wiki.creativecommons.org/DiscussionDraftNonCommercial_Guidelines and a “NonCommercial USE: Creative Commons’ Survey”.

Main aspects to keep in mind or to track when to decide whether a commercial use is likely to happen:

Is NonCommercial a suitable license choice in education?
Important in education to allow derivative works.
“many people can or will make the licensing choice only once. In a collavborative context, license changes can be difficult or even impossible” Erick Möller, The Casefor Free Use: Reasons Not to Use a Creative Commons NonCommercial License

Arguments against NonCommercial:

Main comments by the audience:

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