Bill, you are reminding me of the groundedness and goodness of the folks we meet whenever we dance and travel cross country. Thank you for pointing out that we can still
  trust in folks to be honest,
  have faith in the folk process,
  take pleasure in the creativity that enlivens us all,
  and "relieve stress" by not holding on to fear in the first place....

Karin


On 9/27/2013 4:09 PM, Bill Olson wrote:
Hi all, I've been reading the mail here for a while, time to speak up I guess. 
I'm not sure I get what the problem is.. I admit I haven't read all the posts 
completely, but I guess I want to ask if there has actually been a problem..
i.e.:
Has a choreographer had his or her work used in a way he/she deems 
inappropriate?
Has anyone been sued or has legal action been discussed in reference to any of 
this?
Is anyone here REALLY WORRIED about this or is this just an intellectual 
exercise?
I really don't understand the "licensing" of dance compositions.. What is the purpose of this, and what is it meant to prevent from happening?? I for one am happy for anyone to call dances I have composed.. I do not need you to contact me ahead of time and I will not sue you if you call these dances without my permission. If you put them in a book I will not be unhappy and you do not need to get my permission, though that would be nice and proper credit would be nice too. If you claim the dance is YOURS and then sell it for LOTS of money, I WILL be unhappy but I STILL will not sue you.. I doubt that will happen so I am not "preparing for that eventuality". Just my view of things, "if it ain't broke don't fix it" I guess.. bill should I push "send" now???? oh what the heck, here goes..



Date: Fri, 27 Sep 2013 08:11:30 -0400
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Callers] norms/ethics of choreography sharing

Tavi wrote:
regarding to calling a CC BY-NC dance at a paid
event: is it in fact noncommercial use?
Sounds commercial to me.  The text from the license is:

"You may not exercise any of the rights granted to You in Section 3
above in any manner that is primarily intended for or directed toward
commercial advantage or private monetary compensation." --
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/legalcode

I think the relevant right would be to "Publicly Perform the Work".
You're getting paid to call, so "directed toward private monetary
compensation" sounds applicable.

Jeff
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