Difference between revisions of "CC0"
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*CC0 is a protocol that enables people to | *CC0 is a protocol that enables people to | ||
− | **(a) ASSERT that a work has no | + | **(a) ASSERT that a work has no copyright or neighboring rights restrictions attached to it, OR |
− | **(b) WAIVE any rights associated with a work so it has | + | **(b) WAIVE any rights associated with a work so it has no copyright or neighboring rights restrictions attached to it |
− | *CC0 is similar to what the CC public domain dedication does now. The | + | *CC0 is similar to what the CC public domain dedication does now. Key additions: 1) A protocol facilitating the conveyance of norms with a waiver or assertion statement. 2) Infrastructure for internationalizing the tools. 3) The assertion that content is in the public domain will be vouched for by users, so that there is a platform for reputation systems to develop. People will then be able to judge the reliability of content's copyright status based on who has done the certifying. |
*A beta version of the protocol, including the traditional components of the CC architecture -- legalcode, human-readable explanation, machine-readable metadata, and tools, will be released for public discussion on January 15, 2008. | *A beta version of the protocol, including the traditional components of the CC architecture -- legalcode, human-readable explanation, machine-readable metadata, and tools, will be released for public discussion on January 15, 2008. |
Revision as of 16:06, 15 January 2008
This article describes a DRAFT under discussion; contents, specifications and recommendations may change until the public discussion is complete.
Summary
- CC0 is a protocol that enables people to
- (a) ASSERT that a work has no copyright or neighboring rights restrictions attached to it, OR
- (b) WAIVE any rights associated with a work so it has no copyright or neighboring rights restrictions attached to it
- CC0 is similar to what the CC public domain dedication does now. Key additions: 1) A protocol facilitating the conveyance of norms with a waiver or assertion statement. 2) Infrastructure for internationalizing the tools. 3) The assertion that content is in the public domain will be vouched for by users, so that there is a platform for reputation systems to develop. People will then be able to judge the reliability of content's copyright status based on who has done the certifying.
- A beta version of the protocol, including the traditional components of the CC architecture -- legalcode, human-readable explanation, machine-readable metadata, and tools, will be released for public discussion on January 15, 2008.
Media
- File:Cc plus cc zero pr.pdf - CCZero Official Press Release (pdf)
Adopters
Once CC∅ is launched, there are already some organizations that will roll this out.
- ProteomeCommons.org Tranche Project (implementation details)
- Internet Archive
- Open Library (project by Internet Archive)
- Talis
- Microformats Community
- Open Knowledge Foundation
There will be others announced. Stay tuned!
How do you get involved?
- Jump on over to the CC-Community and/or CC-Licenses email lists for further discussion on CCZero.
- Review the CCZero Technical Overview and provide feedback.