Hey Dimi,

That sounds like a great opportunity! I'm looking very much forward to
their work on the film industry. I recall that I was somewhat surprised of
that choice, and my intuition suggests that we should try to aim for
something entirely different, to be as broad as possible with the two
studies together.

One of the areas we defined as 'low hanging fruit' was government
publications. Some governments are publishing their works in the public
domain, and it would be great if we could have some solid numbers to
support our efforts in convincing other governments to do the same. Would
it be possible to think about a study in that area? They could compare
different types of government (those that publish everything closed, with
some restrictions and entirely PD), and look into the contribution to the
economy there.

It may be that this is still too broad for them, and then we could look
into the same range, but for a subset of works. For example, of a specific
field relevant to each country (I think for example about public health,
infrastructure or public communications about the inner workings of
government/parliament/judiciary). It would be nice if they could cover all
media types, if that is realistic (it somewhat comes as a package).

Another option could be to look into datasets on public infrastructure (the
stuff being reused by OSM, but also by others). There are pretty major
differences between countries here iirc, and some exciting use cases.

Lets discuss! :)

Best,
Lodewijk

Am Dienstag, 4. April 2017 schrieb Dimitar Parvanov Dimitrov :

> Hello, everybody!
>
> Today civil society organisations had a meeting with the EU IPO's
> Observatory [1]. One of the main objectives of the Observatory is to
> produce academic studies in the field of IPR that help policy makers in
> Brussels make evidence based decisions.
>
> Upon joining the Observatory Wikimedia requested a study on the
> "Contribution of the public domain and open licensing to the European
> economy". As the scope of this seemed extremely broad, the Observatory
> decided to work on a study called "Public Domain in the Film Industry"
> analysing how much of the film industry is based on PD content. This study
> has now been peer reviewed and should be available before 5 May.
>
> We have successfully convinced the Observatory to include a second study
> on the public domain & open licenses in the 2017 work programme. The
> challenge now is to find a good aspect that could be researched. It needs
> to be specific and not overly broad. This is what I need your help with! If
> you can think of a good subject to share with the Observatory research
> team, please let me know. They are quite open to taking our ideas, comments
> and feedback into account.
>
> Thank you and cheers,
>
> Dimi
>
> [1]https://euipo.europa.eu/ohimportal/en/web/observatory/home
>
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