stalker,

pode-se usar os modelos do CC com um nome diferente. share alike pode
virar compartilhe livremente, non cmmercial pode virar .... não
comercial! ó!

lembrando q CC é um produto mas o licenciamento de obras é um processo
pelo qual a/o/as/os [EMAIL PROTECTED] explicitam o que se pode fazer com tal
trabalho.

[]s,


On 8/18/06, Stalker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
t wrote:
> "Qual a opinião dos participantes desta lista sobre o CC? "
>
> faça o que eu digo mas não faça o que falo, vide as apostilas da FGV
> sobre propriedade intelectual em copyright,
Aliás, quem tem essas apostilias aí?
> ou o encontro do isummit no
> marriot (um dos hotéis mais caros do rio de janeiro)
>
> minha licença é meu CPF (copie por favor) :)
Isso parece a reencarnação do "por favor, toque" dos trabalhos da Lygia
Clark e do Hélio Oiticica... os quais, atualmente, ninguém pode encostar
(viraram, contra a intenção dos artistas, fetiches auráticos da Arte).

(Estou perguntando sobre o CC porque, em diversos coletivos, p.ex. CMI e
radiolivre.org, há uma grande polêmica sobre usar esses dispositivos
mais institucionais de publicação, feito o CC e o Overmundo, ou de criar
nossos próprios dispositivos de licenciamento e difusão... assim, queria
ver os argumentos MetaRecicleiros sobre o assunto...)
>
>
> xt
>
>
>>
>> Vcs não acham muito "branding" esse CC não? Por que não há uma
>> explosão de máquinas de geração de licenças? (Dá até p/ inventar
>> trocentos sistemas de tagging, mapeamento semântico que o CC não
>> tem... ou tem?)
>>
>>
>> diego rojas wrote:
>>> Galera,
>>>
>>> Meu amigo Walter me mandou isso aqui, gostei muito da matéria, deêm uma
>>> olhada, mal ai estar em inglês, quem puder dá um traduzida, estou sem
>>> tempo....
>>>
>>> Abs
>>>
>>> *SAN FRANCISCO--What Linux has done for operating systems, the Internet
>>> should do for content, a prominent lawyer and activist urged Tuesday.*
>>>
>>> Lawrence Lessig railed against prevailing copyright laws and urged
>>> use of
>>> his alternative creation, the Creative Commons license, speaking to
>>> attendees of the LinuxWorld Conference and Expo here. The license
>>> permits
>>> content such as music, video, photos or text to be reused and
>>> augmented by
>>> others in the same way that the open-source and free software movement
>>> permits programs to be copied and modified.
>>>
>>> Stanford Law School professor
>>> 
Lessig<http://dw.com.com/redir?destUrl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.lessig.org%2F&siteId=22&oId=2100-9588-6105805&ontId=9588&lop=nl.ex>noted
>>>
>>> that Department of Justice lawyers attacking Microsoft for its Windows
>>> monopoly fixated on IBM's vanquished rival, OS/2. But Linux showed that
>>> decentralized, nonproprietary operating systems were viable, he said.
>>>
>>> "The fight for free culture is harder than the fight for free software.
>>> There were no laws against free software, but there are laws that
>>> essentially block free culture," Lessig said.
>>>
>>> In Lessig's view of the world, lawyers, lobbyists and politicians are
>>> building a world of "read only" cultural content. It's "culture
>>> that, like
>>> potato chips, is to be consumed, not created," he said. In contrast,
>>> the
>>> Internet is fostering "read-write" content that is collaboratively
>>> produced
>>> and remixed <http://news.zdnet.com/2100-3513_22-6102451.html?tag=nl> by
>>> groups of people exchanging information.
>>>
>>> "Copyright presumptively conflicts with the read-write Internet. Every
>>> single use requires regulation permission to be granted presumptively,"
>>> Lessig said.
>>>
>>> The Creative
>>> 
Commons<http://dw.com.com/redir?destUrl=http%3A%2F%2Fcreativecommons.org%2F&siteId=22&oId=2100-9588-6105805&ontId=9588&lop=nl.ex>license
>>>
>>> is essentially an end run around that copyright law, and Lessig
>>> boasted of its success in the last four years: As of June, 140 million
>>> content items on the Internet link back to the license, and Google
>>> and Yahoo
>>> search engines can filter for content using the license.
>>>
>>> Lessig showed a variety of videos that mix animations or news
>>> footage with
>>> music to illustrate how copyrighted material can be combined to produce
>>> political commentary or humor. Such remixing will happen whether or not
>>> there's a legal framework for it, but Lessig argued in favor of
>>> building one
>>> that doesn't label the activity as piracy.
>>>
>>> "You must ask whether the values built into our society--to ignore
>>> the rule
>>> of law--are the values we want to raise our children to understand," he
>>> said.
>>>
>>> *Free networks*
>>> Linux has demonstrated that it's possible to build operating systems
>>> and
>>> software that lets customers bypass Microsoft's control. The Creative
>>> Commons, Lessig hopes, will do the same in letting people exchange
>>> content
>>> without reliance on entrenched media powers.
>>>
>>> At a lower level, the technology that routes data across the Internet,
>>> TCP/IP, is an open protocol. But the physical networks used by
>>> TCI/IP give
>>> industry players another point to control the flow of information,
>>> Lessig
>>> said.
>>>
>>> Lessig argued that networks need not be closed and proprietary,
>>> however,
>>> because wireless networks provide a way to bypass the "last mile" of
>>> networks that today link customers to networking companies.
>>>
>>> "Everyone is focused on the only possible way to build broadband
>>> infrastructure, to turn over the soul of the Internet to Comcast and
>>> AT&T. I
>>> wonder if we're not missing something," he said. "There's an
>>> explosion of
>>> municipal and ad-hoc wireless networks. The people building them
>>> will have
>>> no incentive to control how people use the network. As you see these
>>> miniclouds exploding above cities, the last-mile problem is solved."
>>>
>>> Networking companies have lobbied aggressively against
>>> government-funded
>>> wireless networks, arguing that it competes with private-sector
>>> services.
>>> But people need to look carefully at what the role of governments in
>>> supplying infrastructure before labeling supporters of publicly funded
>>> wireless networks as Communists, Lessig said.
>>>
>>> Nobody complains that there aren't private companies competing to build
>>> streetlights to supply photons when it's dark, Lessig said. "We have
>>> this
>>> weird disconnect between what we take for granted about local
>>> infrastructure
>>> services," he said.
>>>
>>> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>>>
>>>
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