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Copyleft through Open Educational Resources & Creative Commons

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Copyleft through Open Educational Resources & Creative Commons

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Marinos Papadopoulos' presentation for speech delivered at 2nd InnoFORUM workshop on IPR & Innovation (February 26, 2010) | Organized: Athens Information Technology (affiliated with Carnegie Mellon-INI, Aalborg University-CTiF, Harvard-Kennedy School of Government) | Venue: Athens Information Technology.

Marinos Papadopoulos' presentation for speech delivered at 2nd InnoFORUM workshop on IPR & Innovation (February 26, 2010) | Organized: Athens Information Technology (affiliated with Carnegie Mellon-INI, Aalborg University-CTiF, Harvard-Kennedy School of Government) | Venue: Athens Information Technology.

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Copyleft through Open Educational Resources & Creative Commons

  1. 1. Copyleft through Open Educational Resources & Creative Commons 2nd International Workshop on intellectual Property Rights & Innovation Athens, February 26, 2010 by Professor Dionysia Kallinikou Associate Professor of Law at National & Kapodistrian University of Athens, Law School & Marinos Papadopoulos Attorney-at-Law J.D., M.Sc., Legal Lead Creative Commons Greece & Alexandra Kaponi Attorney-at-Law LL.M., Judge-Panellist of the EU Court for .eu domain names, Associate Legal Advisor to the National Telecommunications & Post Commission in Greece for .gr domain names
  2. 2. 2nd International Workshop on Intellectual Property Rights & Innovation, Athens, February 26, 2010. Digital Libraries enhanced with OER  It is common understanding that we’ve been in the transitional process of knowledge, science and culture furnished through Internet networking applications and IP networks leveraging on Digital Libraries and repositories enhanced with Open Educational Resources (OER). Dionysia Kallinikou & Marinos Papadopoulos & Alexandra Kaponi | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
  3. 3. 2nd International Workshop on Intellectual Property Rights & Innovation, Athens, February 26, 2010. OER & Openness It has been widely acknowledged that Openness, and OER, should offer the following three freedoms: 1.The freedom to study a work and apply knowledge offered from it. 2.The freedom to redistribute copies, in whole or in part, of a work. 3.The freedom to make improvements or other changes, i.e. to make adaptations, to the content of a work, and, of course, the freedom to release modified copies of it. Dionysia Kallinikou & Marinos Papadopoulos & Alexandra Kaponi | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
  4. 4. 2nd International Workshop on Intellectual Property Rights & Innovation, Athens, February 26, 2010. A work of Open Knowledge A work of Open Knowledge should be available: 1.as a whole and at no more than a reasonable reproduction cost .{access} 2.through a license that does not restrict any party from selling or giving away the work . {redistribution} 3.through a license that allow for modifications and derivative works . {reuse} 4.in such a form that there are no technological obstacles to the performance of the above activities. {no technological restrictions} 5.with proper attribution note. {attribution} 6.in such a way that there is no room for discrimination against any person, group of persons. {no discrimination} Dionysia Kallinikou & Marinos Papadopoulos & Alexandra Kaponi | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
  5. 5. 2nd International Workshop on Intellectual Property Rights & Innovation, Athens, February 26, 2010. OER & OPLI  The OER initiative has been a vehicle for building a culture of sharing.  OER leverages upon the Open Participatory Learning Infrastructure (OPLI) initiative for building a culture of learning and using knowledge for gaining a competitive advantage in the market. Dionysia Kallinikou & Marinos Papadopoulos & Alexandra Kaponi | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
  6. 6. 2nd International Workshop on Intellectual Property Rights & Innovation, Athens, February 26, 2010. OER & Science Gateways  Through web portals, members of a disciplinary collaboratory can reach all the colleagues, computational models, data and literature, and instrumentation they need to do their work.  A science gateway is a community-developed set of tools, applications, and data that is integrated via a portal or a suite of applications, usually in a graphical user interface, that is customized to meet the needs of the targeted community. Dionysia Kallinikou & Marinos Papadopoulos & Alexandra Kaponi | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
  7. 7. 2nd International Workshop on Intellectual Property Rights & Innovation, Athens, February 26, 2010. OER & Science Gateways  Science Gateways provide access not only to open content but also to open scientific instruments and mentored, authentic experience in a community of practice. 1.Permit distributed participatory learning, 2.Provide incentives for participation through the provisioning of OER, such as creating specific learning environments at all levels, 3.Encourage cross-boundary, cross-disciplinary and cross-cultural learning. Dionysia Kallinikou & Marinos Papadopoulos & Alexandra Kaponi | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
  8. 8. 2nd International Workshop on Intellectual Property Rights & Innovation, Athens, February 26, 2010. Copyleft—the routes of OER  The OER movement is routed in the free software experience.  Richard Stallman released pieces of his code under a license that allowed anyone to copy, distribute, and modify the software in whatever way they pleased. He required only that, if the person who modified the software then distributed it to others, he or she should do so under the exact same conditions that he had distributed his software.  The GNU General Public License (GNU GPL). Dionysia Kallinikou & Marinos Papadopoulos & Alexandra Kaponi | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
  9. 9. 2nd International Workshop on Intellectual Property Rights & Innovation, Athens, February 26, 2010. Free Software (O.S.S.)goes mainstream  By 2009 at least 53% of the world’s 2,000 largest companies have implemented, are piloting, or are expanding their use of free software—Open Source Software—applications. [Forrester Research Inc., ‘Open Source Software Goes Mainstream’ (Apr., 2009)]  By 2009, 77% of high-performance IT organizations are now piloting or committing to free software compared to just 37% of overall global businesses. [Accenture, ‘High Performance IT research 2008’ (2009)] Dionysia Kallinikou & Marinos Papadopoulos & Alexandra Kaponi | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
  10. 10. 2nd International Workshop on Intellectual Property Rights & Innovation, Athens, February 26, 2010. Copyright Copyright reserves certain rights for the copyright holder. All others need to obtain permission from them to do any of the following: 1.Create derivative works from the original work, 2.Distribute originals or copies of a work, 3.Publicly display or perform a work.  These limitations cease once the copyright period is over. Dionysia Kallinikou & Marinos Papadopoulos & Alexandra Kaponi | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
  11. 11. 2nd International Workshop on Intellectual Property Rights & Innovation, Athens, February 26, 2010. The Public Domain  Is the wealth of information that is free from the barriers to access or reuse usually associated with copyright protection, either because it is free from any copyright protection or because the authors and right-holders have decided to remove these barriers. Is essential to the social and economic wellbeing of our societies.  Is one of the prerequisites for ensuring that the principles of Article 27§1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights can be enjoyed. Dionysia Kallinikou & Marinos Papadopoulos & Alexandra Kaponi | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
  12. 12. 2nd International Workshop on Intellectual Property Rights & Innovation, Athens, February 26, 2010. The Public Domain 1. Works of authorship where the copyright protection has expired. 2. The essential commons of information that is not covered by copyright. +   Works that are voluntarily shared by their authors and right-holders by licensing them through the use of legal tools such as the Creative Commons licenses. Works that fall within the exceptions and limitations and/or fair use, fair dealing of copyright. Dionysia Kallinikou & Marinos Papadopoulos & Alexandra Kaponi | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
  13. 13. 2nd International Workshop on Intellectual Property Rights & Innovation, Athens, February 26, 2010. Limitations on the Economic Right  Section Four of Greek Copyright Law 2121/1993 (articles 18 et al.): 1.reproduction for private use (art. 18), 2.reproduction for textbooks and anthologies (art. 20), 3.reproduction for teaching purposes (art. 21), 4.reproduction for libraries and archives (art. 22),  clauses for exception from the reproduction right (article 28B) and  the three-step test (article 28C) Dionysia Kallinikou & Marinos Papadopoulos & Alexandra Kaponi | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
  14. 14. 2nd International Workshop on Intellectual Property Rights & Innovation, Athens, February 26, 2010. Article 21 of Law 2121/1993 “It shall be permissible, without the consent of the author and without payment, to reproduce articles lawfully published in a newspaper or periodical, short extracts of a work or parts of a short work or a lawfully published work of fine art work exclusively for teaching or examination purposes at an educational establishment, in such measure as is compatible with the aforementioned purpose, provided that the reproduction is effected in accordance with fair practice and does not conflict with the normal exploitation. The reproduction must be accompanied by an indication of the source and of the names of the author and the publisher, provided that the said names appear on the source.” Dionysia Kallinikou & Marinos Papadopoulos & Alexandra Kaponi | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
  15. 15. 2nd International Workshop on Intellectual Property Rights & Innovation, Athens, February 26, 2010. Article 21 of Law 2121/1993 Are in sync with international treaties on Copyright (e.g. art. 10§§2,3 of the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works {Paris Act of July 24, 1971 as amended on September 28, 1979}) and EU Directives (e.g. art. 5§3(a) of Directive 2001/29/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 22 May 2001).  The provisions of art. 21 are set in Law with the aim to serve the teaching and examination needs in the educational process. If said limitation in the reproduction right is exercised with the aim to serve other purposes, then this reproduction deviates from the scope of art. 21, and thus is not legal. Dionysia Kallinikou & Marinos Papadopoulos & Alexandra Kaponi | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
  16. 16. 2nd International Workshop on Intellectual Property Rights & Innovation, Athens, February 26, 2010. Article 21 of Law 2121/1993 Any distant learning applications implemented through the Internet is excluded from the scope of art. 21 of Law 2121/1993.  Do not allow the reproduction of the whole work, but rather only of short extracts of a work or parts of a short work.  Do not cover the reproduction of software for educational purposes.  Are subject to the provisions of the rule of the threestep-test which is mainly found in article 28C of Greek Copyright Law. Dionysia Kallinikou & Marinos Papadopoulos & Alexandra Kaponi | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
  17. 17. 2nd International Workshop on Intellectual Property Rights & Innovation, Athens, February 26, 2010. Copyleft (through exploitation licenses) Copyright = “All-Rights-Reserved” status Copyleft = “Some-Rights-Reserved” status  Article 13§2 of Law 2121/1993: “The author of the work may authorize another person to exercise economic rights (exploitation licenses).” Dionysia Kallinikou & Marinos Papadopoulos & Alexandra Kaponi | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
  18. 18. 2nd International Workshop on Intellectual Property Rights & Innovation, Athens, February 26, 2010. Creative Commons licenses’ traits Are non-exclusive exploitation licenses. Are based on the legal protection that copyright affords, but grant more rights to users.  Are the most popular set of licenses for the implementation of Openness .  Are the most widely used licensing option for the implementation of OER. Dionysia Kallinikou & Marinos Papadopoulos & Alexandra Kaponi | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
  19. 19. 2nd International Workshop on Intellectual Property Rights & Innovation, Athens, February 26, 2010. The 6 Creative Commons licenses Attribution Attribution + Share-Alike Attribution + No-Derivatives Attribution + Non-Commercial Attribution + Non-Commercial + No-Derivatives Attribution + Non-Commercial + Share-Alike Dionysia Kallinikou & Marinos Papadopoulos & Alexandra Kaponi | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
  20. 20. 2nd International Workshop on Intellectual Property Rights & Innovation, Athens, February 26, 2010. The 4 Creative Commons License Elements (Conditions) Attribution Share-Alike No-Derivatives Non-Commercial Dionysia Kallinikou & Marinos Papadopoulos & Alexandra Kaponi | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
  21. 21. 2nd International Workshop on Intellectual Property Rights & Innovation, Athens, February 26, 2010. The 4 Creative Commons License Elements (Conditions) You let others copy, distribute, display, and perform your copyrighted work—and derivative works based upon it—but only if they give credit the way you request. You allow others to distribute derivative works only under a license identical to the license that governs your work. You let others copy, distribute, display, and perform only verbatim copies of your work, not derivative works based upon it. You let others copy, distribute, display, and perform your work—and derivative works based upon it—but for noncommercial purposes only. Dionysia Kallinikou & Marinos Papadopoulos & Alexandra Kaponi | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
  22. 22. 2nd International Workshop on Intellectual Property Rights & Innovation, Athens, February 26, 2010. Positive Externality A self-interested decision of the authors and right-holders to adopt the Creative Commons licensing model spills over to parties other than those who explicitly engage in their decision, namely other members of the academic community of AIT and the general public at large.  Positive externality regarding reputation and other intangible values as corporate and marketable assets is produced. Dionysia Kallinikou & Marinos Papadopoulos & Alexandra Kaponi | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
  23. 23. 2nd International Workshop on Intellectual Property Rights & Innovation, Athens, February 26, 2010. Public Policy for Openness The Creative Commons licensing model should become the backbone of public policy regarding public academic institutions and copyrighted works produced by public entities and Governmental bodies.  Positive externality regarding reputation and other intangible values as corporate and marketable assets is produced. Dionysia Kallinikou & Marinos Papadopoulos & Alexandra Kaponi | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
  24. 24. 2nd International Workshop on Intellectual Property Rights & Innovation, Athens, February 26, 2010. Creative Commoners Let’s watch this video (3:24 min) Dionysia Kallinikou & Marinos Papadopoulos & Alexandra Kaponi | URL: www.marinos.com.gr
  25. 25. Copyleft through Open Educational Resources & Creative Commons 2nd International Workshop on intellectual Property Rights & Innovation Athens, February 26, 2010 Thank you! This presentation is available through the Bulletin Board of my site at the URL www.marinos.com.gr Dionysia Kallinikou & Marinos Papadopoulos & Alexandra Kaponi | URL: www.marinos.com.gr

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