Monthly Archives: March 2010
O que é a eIFL.net?
About us
New homepage
Please visit my new homepage at the SFU School of Communication! The SFU page will function as my homepage (and CV, when I get around to this). At this point in time, my thought is that the SFU will be the more formal academic site, while IJPE will continue to be the place for most of my commentary.
Launch of “Copyright for Librarians” – an Online Open Curriculum on Copyright Law
2010-03-24 – Harvard’s Berkman Center for Internet & Society and eIFL.net Launch “Copyright for Librarians”, an Online Open Curriculum on Copyright Law
Prof. Mary Abukutsa-Onyango discusses the importance of Open Access for research from Kenya and other African countries
Presentations from the workshop Open Access and the Evolving Scholarly Communication Environment, February 17 – 19, 2010, University of Nairobi
How to start: Setting up repositories
Author: Iryna Kuchma
Open repositories: Case studies from Kenya: University of Nairobi
Author: Rosemary Otando, Library Department, University of Nairobi
Open repositories: Case studies from Kenya: Kenya Research Medical Institute
Open repositories: Case studies from Kenya: Partnering with Faculty / researchers to Enhance Scholarly Communication
Author: Caroline Mutwiri. Presented by Ruth Gibendi, Strathmore University.
Open repositories: Case studies from Kenya: Using Mahider
Presented by Grace Kamau, ILRI
Emerging Research and Educational Opportunities in the Open Access Knowledge Environment
Author: Leslie Chan, University of Toronto Scarborough
Open Hardware
Creative Commons was fortunate enough to be involved in a fascinating workshop last week in New York on Open Hardware. Video is at the link, photos below.
The background is that I met Ayah Bdeir at the Global Entrepreneurship Week festivities in Beirut, and we started talking about her LittleBits project (which is, crudely, like Legos for electrics assembly – even someone as spatially impaired as me could build a microphone or pressure sensor in minutes).
Ayah introduced me to the whole open hardware (OH) world and asked a lot of very good, hard to answer questions about how to use CC in the context of OH. It became clear that a lot of the people involved in the movement didn’t have a clear grasp of how the various layers of intellectual property might or might not apply.
Ayah suggested in February that we put together a little workshop – almost a teach-in – around a meeting of Arduino advocates happening in NYC on the 18-19 of March. In a matter of three weeks, we got representatives from a bunch of major players to commit: Arduino (world’s largest open hardware platform), BugLabs, Adafruit, Chumby, Make magazine, even Chris Anderson. Mako Hill from the Free Software Foundation came and @rejon made it there at the last minute too, wearing his openmoko and qi hardware hats. Eyebeam hosted it for free, and we picked up the snacks and cheese trays.
I gave a very short intro laying out how the science commons project @ creative commons has spent a lot of time looking at IPRs as a layered problem, dealing with it at data levels, materials levels, and patent levels, as well as the fact-idea-expression relationships in science. This was to create some context for why we might have interesting ideas.
Thinh proceeded to deliver a masterful lecture on IP that went on for hours, though intended to be 30 minutes. It was an interactive, give-and-take, wonderful session to watch, ranging from copyrights to mask works to trade secrets to trademarks and patents. The folks there liked it enough to suspend the break period after five minutes and dive back into IP.
After that we had a lengthy interactive session driven by the OH folks in which they tried to decide what a declaration of principles might look like, how detailed to get, how to engage in existing efforts to do similar things (like OHANDA), the role of the publishers like Wired and Make to support definitions of open hardware, and how open one had to be in order to be open.
There was no formal outcome at the close of business, but I expect a declaration or statement of some sort to emerge (akin to the Budapest Declaration on Open Access from my own world of scholarly publishing). There’s clearly a lot of work to be done. And the reality is that copyrights and patents and trademarks and norms and software and hardware are going to be hard to reconcile into a simple, single license that “makes copyleft hardware” a reality. But it was fun to be in a room with so many passionate, brilliant people who want to make the world a better place through collaborative research.
More to come once results emerge…
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