Eduserv Releases Study about the Use of Open Content Licenses By UK Heritage Organizations
The Eduserv Foundation has released Snapshot Study on the Use of Open Content Licences in the UK Cultural Heritage Sector (Appendices).
Here's an excerpt from the "Executive Summary":
This study investigates the awareness and use of open content licences in the UK cultural heritage community by way of a survey. Open content licensing generally grants a wide range of permission in copyright for use and re-use of works such as images, sounds, video, and text, whilst retaining a relatively small set of rights: often described as a ‘some rights reserved’ approach to copyright. For those wishing to share content using this model, Creative Archive (CA) and Creative Commons (CC) represent the two main sets of open content licences available for use in the United Kingdom.
The year of this survey, 2007, marks five years from the launch of the Creative Commons licences, two years since the launch of the UK-specific CC licences and two years as well since the launch of the UK-only Creative Archive licence.
This survey targeted UK cultural heritage organisations—primarily museums, libraries, galleries, archives, and those in the media community that conduct heritage activities (such as TV and radio broadcasters and film societies). In particular, this community produces trusted and highly valued content greatly desired by the general public and the research and education sectors. They are therefore a critical source of high-demand content and thus the focus for this project. The key objective has been to get a snapshot of current licensing practices in this area in 2007 for use by the sector and funding bodies wishing to do more work in this area.
Over 100 organisations responded to this web-based survey. Of these respondents:
- Only 4 respondents out of 107 indicated that they held content but were not making it available online nor had plans to make it available online;
- Images and text are the two content types most likely to be made available online;
- Sound appears to be the most held content type not currently available online and with no plans to make it available in the future;
- Many make some part of their collection available online without having done any formal analysis of the impact this may have;
- 59 respondents were aware of Creative Archive or Creative Commons;
- 10 use a CA or CC licence for some of their content; and
- 12 have plans to use a CA or CC licence in the future.
Latest posts in Copyright
- PubMed Central Deposit and Author Rights: Agreements between 12 Publishers and the Authors Subject to the NIH Public Access Policy - August 15th, 2008
- Digital Video: CSPAN Interview with the U.S. Register of Copyrights - August 14th, 2008
- Legal Victory for Open Licenses: Jacobsen v. Katzer and Kamind Associates - August 13th, 2008
Latest posts in Creative Commons/Open Licenses
- Legal Victory for Open Licenses: Jacobsen v. Katzer and Kamind Associates - August 13th, 2008
- Digital Curation Centre Releases "Creative Commons Licensing" - August 6th, 2008
- Microsoft's Free Digital Tools for Scholars - July 28th, 2008
Latest posts in Digital Archives and Special Collections
- Five TexTreasures Digitization Grants Awarded - August 15th, 2008
- OpenCollection Version 0.54-3 Released - August 8th, 2008
- The Impact of Digitizing Special Collections on Teaching and Scholarship: Reflections on a Symposium about Digitization and the Humanities - August 5th, 2008
Latest posts in Museums
- OpenCollection Version 0.54-3 Released - August 8th, 2008
- Research Study: How Is Web 2.0 Viewed by Academics? - July 7th, 2008
- Project Directory: Museum Computer Network and the Museum Software Foundation Release MuseTech Central - April 13th, 2008
Latest posts in Open Access
- Hindawi Launches Open Access Institutional Membership Program - August 19th, 2008
- Repositories Support Project Launches RSP Blog Directory - August 19th, 2008
- Video Clips from the Open Access Documentary Project - August 18th, 2008
Latest posts in Scholarly Communication
- Adrian K. Ho Named Scholarly Communication Librarian at Western Libraries of the University of Western Ontario - August 19th, 2008
- A Look at the Development and Future of Scholarly Communication in High Energy Physics - August 6th, 2008
- Scholarly Electronic Publishing Weblog Update (8/5/08) - August 5th, 2008




























