An Open Source movie is a movie where:

1) The license of the movie is approved for Free Cultural Works. Specifically 
this is true for the Creative Commons licenses by and by-sa.

2) The materials used in the movie (sources) are also available under a license 
which is approved for Free Cultural Works.

3) The movie and its sources are made publicly available via an online download 
or by other means that are either free or with a cost that covers reasonable 
reproduction expenses only.

4) The sources should be viewable and editable with free/open source software. 
If this is not the case, they must be convertible into such a format by using 
free/open source software. The same applies to the movie itself.

5) It should be possible to re-create or re-assemble the movie using the source 
materials. ers reasonable reproduction expenses only.


1-3
These 3 are in essence the contents of the Open Knowledge Definition:

http://www.opendefinition.org/1.0/

which in a nutshell says:

1. You should be able to get the work (in a modifiable source form)
2. You should get it under a license that allows for use, reuse and
redistribution without restriction (other than, possibly, share-alike
and attribution)

(The OKD and the FCW definition are very similar in essence -- the two
projects have been extensive contact with the OKD being developed
slightly before the FCW definition and being slightly broader in
focus).
Regards,

Rufus
I partly disagree. The point of the Open Source movie definiton is the availability of sources because film being a complex medium where many parts can be reused in other works only if the fhe respective source (and not the mashed-up final piece) is available (3d models, single shots, underlying music, screenplay, etc.). While the Open knowledge definiton is suitable for open (content) films it doesn't really require sources to be available. The def. of free cultural works does but as I wrote in a previous posting this def. is too demanding on the "free" part.

It isn't clear to me from the requirements listed that a new
definition is needed -- rather a guide to complying with the FCW/OKD
for filmmakers.

Mike
In recent years the term open source movie has become a big catchword for everything which is somehow cc licensed (best example is this one: http://www.archive.org/details/opensource_movies). So I felt that sth. should be done about and since I couldn't find any def. or theoretical work on it...

Regards, Tim

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