Saturday, December 15, 2012
Creative Commons is 10 years old
Source: http://www.opensrs.com/blog/2010/12/happy-birthday-creative-commons/
How time flies! Here we are, 10 years after we launched the licenses into the world. So many happy surprises. The supporters, adopters, and the extraordinary network of affiliates and projects around the world. I want to express thanks and admiration to all. http://10.creativecommons.org/
We still have much more to do, and we continue to need support. I'm looking forward to the next decade, and thanks in advance to all who have been able to support us along the way.
Second Global Congress on IP and the Public Interest
The Second Global Congress on Intellectual Property and the Public Interest is being held on December 15-17, 2012 in Rio de Janeiro. Information on the schedule, live (and later, archived) webcast links are here. http://www.global-congress.org/
Twitter feed is at #gcongress.
Friday, September 21, 2012
Still Waiting on Obama
Does the Obama Administration
believe in the power of the Internet to maximize the value of public
investments in scientific research? We will soon find out. Each year, the
government spends about $60 billion on basic scientific research. About half of
this money goes to the National Institutes of Health, which has an
Internet-friendly Public Access Policy that requires all grantees to provide a
copy of journal articles and other published results of taxpayer-funded
research to be posted online within one year after publication. This policy has
bipartisan support and has been an unqualified success. So, why not require the
other agencies that fund basic research, like the National Science Foundation,
NASA and the Department of Energy, to do the same?
The White House is in the process of deciding how to answer this
question. Specifically, the Office of Science and Technology Policy asked for
public comment on the issue of open access to science journal articles and
scientific research data arising from all federally-funded research - twice.
The responses to the White House inquiries show that posting scientific
research online benefits multiple audiences: (1) researchers working from home
or from a place where they do not have access to institutional subscriptions;
(2) entrepreneurs who lack the funds to purchase expensive journal
subscriptions; (3) students whose schools cannot afford subscriptions to all
the relevant journals; (4) patients and their families who want to read the
medical research for themselves; and (5) text mining software that can aid all
of the above in interpreting the journal literature to make decisions about new
research paths and to make new discoveries about patterns and associations that
a human reader alone would never see.
The President has the authority to require that researchers who
receive federal grants must agree to provide public access on the Internet to
copies of research articles arising from this federal support. Such a policy is
fully consistent with copyright law because authors of these articles make a
choice to allow their articles to be posted online in exchange for the federal
funding that allows them to do the research and write these articles. The
Administration has delayed in exercising this authority because a group of
journal publishers oppose the principle of taxpayer access to taxpayer-funded
research even when the evidence is clear that the NIH policy does not impact
their subscription revenues.
Frustrated by this delay, three open access allies, Heather
Joseph, John Wilbanks, and Mike Rossner, and I lodged a petition
on the White House's "We the People" website. The petition asks the
Administration to extend the NIH Public Access Policy to all federal agencies
that fund scientific research. If a petition gets 25,000 signatures within 30
days, the Administration will issue an official response. We posted our
petition on Sunday, May 20th, and started a web site, www.access2research.org, to explain
why. Researchers, students, librarians, innovators, patients' advocacy
organizations, and Internet supporters of all kinds have risen up to meet the
challenge, and the petition passed the 25,000 mark in just two weeks on Sunday
(June 3, 2012).
Now that the Administration has to respond at least to the
petition, will it side with the public or with the group of publishers who
actively resist the idea that publicly funded research should be available on
the public Internet?
Michael Carroll is a Professor of Law at American University Washington
College of Law, Heather Joseph is the Executive Director of the Scholarly
Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition, John Wilbanks is a Senior Fellow
at the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation and runs the Consent to Research
Project, and Mike Rossner is the Executive Director of the Rockefeller
University Press, which publishes three influential journals in the life
sciences that make their content freely available online six months after
publication.
On Information Justice (Book Review)
This is a cross-post of my response to Madhavi Sunder's book From Goods to a Good Life in a blogging symposium over at Concurring Opinions.
Like the other commenters on From Goods to a Good Life, I also enjoyed the book and applaud Professor Sunder's initiative in engaging more explicitly in the values conversation than has been conventionally done in IP scholarship. I also agree with most of what the other commenters have said. I want to offer plaudits, a few challenges, and some suggestions about future directions for this conversation.
Plaudits. In the spirit of showing-not-telling, Professor Sunder's concrete examples of borrowing practices across the world and in different creative and innovative sectors give force to the argument that all culture is participatory and that the real question is who is allowed to participate and under what terms. I particularly enjoyed the fan fiction chapter (and the article upon which it is based), the Hollywood/Bollywood chapter, and the engagement with the thorny topic of "traditional knowledge". On this last, like others, I'm less sanguine about the prospects for greater propertization than is Professor Sunder, but certainly there are ways in which the poor might more effectively use the existing legal structure to exercise greater control.
I also think that building out the case for cultural participation as self-actualization (at both the individual and community levels) is nicely done. To the extent that this book is a response to selected scholarship and the work of certain public intellectuals, Professor Sunder rightly critiques unstated assumptions upon which traditional law-and-economics work is built, while also critiquing the romance of the public domain.
I did not read Professor Sunder to be making an argument for specific law reform - although some options are mentioned - rather than to advocate for a vision of the good. I took this to be a political argument about why and how the cultures, contributions, and productive capacity of marginalized populations deserve greater recognition in society, first, and in law to the extent that this is not already done.
Challenges. On this last point, I would like to understand better the relation between Professor Sunder's cultural critique and her legal critique. Somewhat like a cultural fitness instructor, Professor Sunder urges us to get off the couch, flex our creative muscles and ensure that everyone in society is equipped with a cultural gym pass and the time and support to put it to use. But, time and attention are limited resources. When living the good life, what is the right mix of "writing" and "reading" culture? Can we have both a participatory and a popular culture? Writing in a moment when so much time and attention around the world is devoted to corporate-produced mass culture, I understand why Professor Sunder focuses her energy on the case for participation. "[T]he end is participation in meaning-making and in having the capacity to earn a livelihood to achieve the life one scripts for herself." [100] But, there are trade-offs. A shared experience as audience plays an important role in promoting cultural cohesion. I would like to know whether there could be a point of too much participation within Professor Sunder's conception of the good life.
This book is directed at the law-in-selected-scholarship, and, very generally, at the law on the books, rather than at the law in action. Fair enough. But, the version of efficiency from the scholarship that Professor Sunder targets is assuredly an artificial one that emerged when Professor Landes and Judge Posner made their move from welfare to wealth as the unit of measure. They, and their followers, made this move without taking any meaningful account of the gap between the willingness-to-pay and ability-to-pay, the distortions caused by money's declining marginal value, the incommensurability problem, and the gap between partial and general equilibria, among other shortcomings.
Moreover, as I and others have written at greater length elsewhere, even when one accepts this version of efficiency, its internal logic, if fully explicated, would likely lead the law on the books to align more closely with that suggested by Professor Sunder's approach than is readily appreciated. The first order question is why promote progress, and how does one define it? Second is whether intellectual property law or a direct investment policy would better achieve efficiency, however measured. The law and economics literature lacks a general framework for arriving at the most efficient choices among these approaches. This point gets a brief mention in the discussion of prizes in the last chapter, but I would have thought it to be more central to Professor Sunder's thesis. Third, even to the extent that creating and enforcing intellectual property rights is justified on efficiency grounds, the subject matter, scope, and duration of these should vary sufficiently to leave more room than existing law does for participatory culture.
Finally, I was expecting a more explicit human rights turn or at least more thoroughgoing engagement with the body of international human rights law in which Professor Sunder's thesis sounds. She does acknowledge the link at pp. 90, 92-93, and 101, but I would have been particularly interested to understand how Professor Sunder would resolve the conflict between the moral rights justification for authors' rights and her argument for a fair and participatory culture. Human flourishing cuts both ways. Your right to preserve the integrity of your work on personhood grounds limits my ability to participate in culture by mashing it up.
Future Directions. My sense is that those interested in efficiency as measured by welfare and those approaching intellectual property from Professor Sunder's approach might well come to incompletely theorized agreement about the proper delineation of most rights. The values conversation may provoke greater disagreement about what other policies might be desirable to support broader cultural participation. Moreover, the values conversation is directly relevant to how one conceives of, and chooses to pursue, the good life within the legal framework. I would submit that this conversation should lead toward a working theory of information justice, which would certainly draw from more general theories of justice, including those upon which Professor Sunder relies. On this point, I would put in a plug for Peter Drahos' elegant and, at the moment, ridiculously scarce A Philosophy of Intellectual Property, which lays a rich intellectual foundation upon which this conversation could fruitfully build. That said, thank you, Professor Sunder, for a good read and much food for thought.
Like the other commenters on From Goods to a Good Life, I also enjoyed the book and applaud Professor Sunder's initiative in engaging more explicitly in the values conversation than has been conventionally done in IP scholarship. I also agree with most of what the other commenters have said. I want to offer plaudits, a few challenges, and some suggestions about future directions for this conversation.
Plaudits. In the spirit of showing-not-telling, Professor Sunder's concrete examples of borrowing practices across the world and in different creative and innovative sectors give force to the argument that all culture is participatory and that the real question is who is allowed to participate and under what terms. I particularly enjoyed the fan fiction chapter (and the article upon which it is based), the Hollywood/Bollywood chapter, and the engagement with the thorny topic of "traditional knowledge". On this last, like others, I'm less sanguine about the prospects for greater propertization than is Professor Sunder, but certainly there are ways in which the poor might more effectively use the existing legal structure to exercise greater control.
I also think that building out the case for cultural participation as self-actualization (at both the individual and community levels) is nicely done. To the extent that this book is a response to selected scholarship and the work of certain public intellectuals, Professor Sunder rightly critiques unstated assumptions upon which traditional law-and-economics work is built, while also critiquing the romance of the public domain.
I did not read Professor Sunder to be making an argument for specific law reform - although some options are mentioned - rather than to advocate for a vision of the good. I took this to be a political argument about why and how the cultures, contributions, and productive capacity of marginalized populations deserve greater recognition in society, first, and in law to the extent that this is not already done.
Challenges. On this last point, I would like to understand better the relation between Professor Sunder's cultural critique and her legal critique. Somewhat like a cultural fitness instructor, Professor Sunder urges us to get off the couch, flex our creative muscles and ensure that everyone in society is equipped with a cultural gym pass and the time and support to put it to use. But, time and attention are limited resources. When living the good life, what is the right mix of "writing" and "reading" culture? Can we have both a participatory and a popular culture? Writing in a moment when so much time and attention around the world is devoted to corporate-produced mass culture, I understand why Professor Sunder focuses her energy on the case for participation. "[T]he end is participation in meaning-making and in having the capacity to earn a livelihood to achieve the life one scripts for herself." [100] But, there are trade-offs. A shared experience as audience plays an important role in promoting cultural cohesion. I would like to know whether there could be a point of too much participation within Professor Sunder's conception of the good life.
This book is directed at the law-in-selected-scholarship, and, very generally, at the law on the books, rather than at the law in action. Fair enough. But, the version of efficiency from the scholarship that Professor Sunder targets is assuredly an artificial one that emerged when Professor Landes and Judge Posner made their move from welfare to wealth as the unit of measure. They, and their followers, made this move without taking any meaningful account of the gap between the willingness-to-pay and ability-to-pay, the distortions caused by money's declining marginal value, the incommensurability problem, and the gap between partial and general equilibria, among other shortcomings.
Moreover, as I and others have written at greater length elsewhere, even when one accepts this version of efficiency, its internal logic, if fully explicated, would likely lead the law on the books to align more closely with that suggested by Professor Sunder's approach than is readily appreciated. The first order question is why promote progress, and how does one define it? Second is whether intellectual property law or a direct investment policy would better achieve efficiency, however measured. The law and economics literature lacks a general framework for arriving at the most efficient choices among these approaches. This point gets a brief mention in the discussion of prizes in the last chapter, but I would have thought it to be more central to Professor Sunder's thesis. Third, even to the extent that creating and enforcing intellectual property rights is justified on efficiency grounds, the subject matter, scope, and duration of these should vary sufficiently to leave more room than existing law does for participatory culture.
Finally, I was expecting a more explicit human rights turn or at least more thoroughgoing engagement with the body of international human rights law in which Professor Sunder's thesis sounds. She does acknowledge the link at pp. 90, 92-93, and 101, but I would have been particularly interested to understand how Professor Sunder would resolve the conflict between the moral rights justification for authors' rights and her argument for a fair and participatory culture. Human flourishing cuts both ways. Your right to preserve the integrity of your work on personhood grounds limits my ability to participate in culture by mashing it up.
Future Directions. My sense is that those interested in efficiency as measured by welfare and those approaching intellectual property from Professor Sunder's approach might well come to incompletely theorized agreement about the proper delineation of most rights. The values conversation may provoke greater disagreement about what other policies might be desirable to support broader cultural participation. Moreover, the values conversation is directly relevant to how one conceives of, and chooses to pursue, the good life within the legal framework. I would submit that this conversation should lead toward a working theory of information justice, which would certainly draw from more general theories of justice, including those upon which Professor Sunder relies. On this point, I would put in a plug for Peter Drahos' elegant and, at the moment, ridiculously scarce A Philosophy of Intellectual Property, which lays a rich intellectual foundation upon which this conversation could fruitfully build. That said, thank you, Professor Sunder, for a good read and much food for thought.
Tuesday, July 03, 2012
World Bank Open Access Policy
As many may know, on April 1, 2012, the World Bank adopted an important open access policy for formal publications by World Bank staff. This is a very important step for the open access movement and for Creative Commons.
Two aspects of the policy that deserve special mention: (1) deposit is required; and (2) the policy focuses on the terms of reuse in addition to online availability.
The key features are that World Bank staff are required to deposit their research into the Bank's Open Knowledge Repository. Internally published research will be published under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License. Externally published articles will be published under the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial No Derivatives 3.0 Unported License unless the publisher accepts the CC BY license.
On May 21, 2012, I participated in a panel discussion about how this policy will contribute to the Bank's pro-development mission. The video from that is here:
Two aspects of the policy that deserve special mention: (1) deposit is required; and (2) the policy focuses on the terms of reuse in addition to online availability.
The key features are that World Bank staff are required to deposit their research into the Bank's Open Knowledge Repository. Internally published research will be published under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License. Externally published articles will be published under the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial No Derivatives 3.0 Unported License unless the publisher accepts the CC BY license.
On May 21, 2012, I participated in a panel discussion about how this policy will contribute to the Bank's pro-development mission. The video from that is here:
Saturday, June 02, 2012
Open Access Petition Featured on Wikipedia
Thanks to all who have supported our petition to the White House to require that the published results of all research funded by the federal government be posted on the Internet. And, special thanks to the Wikimedia Board and the Wikipedian community for their support. Today, we made the front page. We are almost at the 25,000 signatures we need to spur an official response. If you haven't already done so, please sign the petition!
Tuesday, May 22, 2012
Please Support the Open Access Petition
Yesterday, May 21, 2012, we launched a big push to get 25,000 signatures in the next 30 days on a White House petition asking President Obama to implement a strong public access policy. It's time to ask the Obama Administration to step up and do the right thing. We have had four years of success with the NIH Public Access Policy and two Requests for Information on public access during the past few years. A strong showing of support through this petition could very well be the catalyst the White House needs to take decisive action and implement a strong public access policy.
To reach our goal of 25,000 signatures -- and preferably blow it out of the water -- please pass along these two relatively small asks.
1. Sign the White House petition at http://wh.gov/6TH. It takes about 2 minutes to do, and anyone over the age of 13 can sign -- not just Americans.
2. Urge your friends, family, and colleagues to sign the petition as well. To pass the 25,000 mark, making the petition go viral is critical and we need your help to do so. Consider:
- Watching our 90 second youtube video promoting the petition, and sharing it
- Posting about the petition on your personal and organizational facebook and twitter accounts (#openaccess, #OAMonday). Let people know that you've signed!
- Sending a short email to friends and family urging them to sign
- Writing op-eds or letters to the editor about the petition and its potential impact for students
- Blogging about it
- Upvoting stories about the petition on Reddit, Slashdot, and other social news sites
Thanks in advance for your help, and it will certainly be a very exciting next couple of weeks!
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