Case Studies/CCMCP

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License Used
unspecified
Media
Sound
Adoption date unspecified
Tags
music education tools
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The Creative Commons Music Collaboration Project (CCMCP) provides artists with applications to help them coordinate collaborative audio projects and build a community of practice around learning, sharing, and connecting.

I started developing with the intention of exposing people to music; the idea that everyone should have free unfettered access to all kinds of music. Yoav Givati, Founder, CCMCP

Overview

Statistics

Since CCMCP’s launch, the site has attracted more than 2000 unique visitors, of whom approximately 150 have registered to test and use the application. Ranging from Mumbai, India to Johannesburg, South Africa, visitors to the site are diverse. Most come from the United States of America, then Canada, followed by the United Kingdom, Italy, and Brazil. A few enthusiastic testers have gone beyond the simple feature requests, and through discussions over Instant Messaging have provided the main development team with in-depth examinations of desired features and functionality of the site.

Licence Usage

With the new implementation of the CCMCP site, Yoav Givati and his development team intend to allow users to select among the six main Creative Commons licences in addition to a Public Domain option and the standard © All Rights Reserved. The goal for this implementation is to give users the freedom to do whatever they want with their content and whatever is welcomed with each other’s.

The CCMCP’s current Terms of Use specify that user-submitted audio is subject to the copyright or Creative Commons licence the user who uploaded it assigns to it. By uploading copyrighted materials such as audio and images, the user grants the CCMCP the right to stream and display that copyrighted material on CCMCP for as long as the user keeps it on CCMCP. Users have the right to remove their content whenever they wish, and the CCMCP does not claim any ownership over such content.

As explained on the CCMCP Project site, the CCMCP Library is technically a Rich Internet Application (RIA) which allows the subscribed user to access the site’s music library, as well as contribute to that library through the addition of their own original or transformative tracks. The library is catalogued and viewable by projects, which carry descriptions specified at point of creation. Each project can have unlimited files added by an unlimited number of people.

Each project file (in .mp3 format) is assigned a copyright or Creative Commons licence, which gives the musician control over how others use and manipulate their works. Artists can also specify uses through adding detail to the description box about how they wish their work to be used. The description as to how others can sample or create derivative works can be changed during the file’s initial upload or at any time thereafter.

The RIA is able to be accessed via the main website or downloaded onto PC or Mac. The RIA is part of a new breed of Internet application that exists independently of web browsers. It requires the running of Adobe Integrated Runtime (AIR) environment.

Motivations

CCMCP creator Yoav Givati first heard about Creative Commons after entering the world of web development in mid-2006, when he was introduced to the idea of flexible rights for creative content. Yoav immediately began reading up on open source, GPL, copyleft, and Creative Commons. Creative Commons appealed to him not only because the licences seemed to reach the widest spectrum of users, but he also found that in reading through the documentation and browsing through different implementations there was a distinct sense of openness that other alternatives lacked. In addition, Yoav found a sense of community where it seemed possible for the licences to be applicable across the depths of the Internet regardless of region, nationality, or legal system.

'The idea that I – not some governing body – could decide how others can interact with my work and that declaring those rights didn’t involving sending off for some customized patent or making some vague declaration of insertion into the public domain. …Creative Commons was applicable to so much more than just computer code, and as a musician, artist, and naïve programmer, the wheels in my head just began spinning and aren’t likely to stop soon.'- Yoav Givati, in email conversation with Rachel Cobcroft from CCau, 12 April 2008

CCMCP’s stated purpose is to create a music-rich community focused on education and musical experimentation, and to deliver this environment to anyone with Internet access. The concept underlying CCMCP is thus a simple one: to take the feeling of an intimate yet open community and provide access to knowledge, granting users the freedom to get knee-deep in each other’s creative works for the sake of learning, sharing, and connecting. Yoav adds:

'A big part of that freedom is allowing users to define their own boundaries for a given work, rather than forcing them to adopt someone else’s view of the optimum rights for sharing. We believe the creator should define the purpose for their work and based on our feedback we can say that people believe the purpose of creating is to share, at the very root, for the sake and in the hopes of enriching someone else’s experience.'