Published in Fair Use,
OCWC Conference,
copyright,
creative commons,
education,
educational,
intellectual property,
licensing,
ocw,
open educational resource,
open educational resources,
opencourseware and
remix .
You may have heard rumors that some of the US OCW producers have been working on a project to explore issues of Fair Use in Open Educational Resources. Fair Use is the US version of a phenomena more generally known as Copyright Exceptions and Limitations, and most OCW projects have started out with the conservative assumption that they don’t get much fair use coverage. Some lawyers are starting to say otherwise, however, so the Fair Use Working Group is gathering data about how OERs in the US are negotiating Fair Use. The hope is to publish a Code of Best Practice for OER later in the year.
But the OCWC is a global consortium, so the Fair Use project is only one part of a larger initiative to explore the implications of Copyright Exceptions and Limitations (CELs) for OER’s. We’ve started a wiki page for this larger initiative entitled Copyright Exceptions and Limitations, where you can see a conceptual map for the larger project as we see it so far. You’ll also see a link to a draft page for gathering data about CELs in different legal jurisdictions. Use the comment tabs on either page to share your ideas! We’ll be hosting a working session on International Copyright Exceptions and Limitations at the OCWC Global Meeting in Monterrey, Mexico next month, with Ahrash Bissell from CC Learn as our facilitator. At the session we’ll discuss what additional data it would be useful to gather and walk through the data gathering process.
OK, I’ll admit it’s a mouthful. But it was between that and the overly clinical OCWC_908, which sounded sort of like a vitamin supplement.
For those just joining us: in the comments of our last post, Stian pushed us to get together a tag for any writing people wanted to do regarding the OCWC conference. The idea here is that:
- Presenters can blog on their own blogs about what they plan to do at the conference, and we’ll catch it in aggregation
- People attending can write before the fact about what they’d want to get out of it, and we’ll catch that
- People can respond to what they got out of the conference and will be able to get that on the radar as well
That’s just the briefest overview of what we might get out of tag-based aggregation (add to that photos, resources, twitter feeds — this is really open-ended). But the point is if you are talking about anything regarding the upcoming Logan OCWC event, tag it somehow, via Wordpress, del.icio.us, Digg, flickr, whatever.
In the next couple of days we’ll provide someway to track such tagged materials (although don’t let us stop you from tracking it using your own tools), and for the more hieracharchly inclined we will be throwing up information on the wiki about the individual the sessions (watch this space for more info).
But please, tag, tag, tag!Â
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