Survey on open content and the UK cultural heritage sector out

Apologies for crossposting

____

With the support and funding of Eduserv, we have completed a study on  
the use of open content licences in the UK cultural heritage sector.  
The main focus of the study was on the Creative Commons and Creative  
Archive licences.
"Snapshot study on the use of open content licences in the UK  
cultural heritage sector"

The survey report, and appendices are available from the study  
website at:

<http://www.eduserv.org.uk/foundation/studies/cc2007>

Thanks!

~Jordan
Rufus Pollock | 20 Nov 13:21
Gravatar

Re: Survey on open content and the UK cultural heritage sector out

Great work Jordan, and we put up a blog post last friday:

<http://blog.okfn.org/2007/11/16/eduserv-study-on-open-content-licensing-in-cultural-heritage-sector-published/>

The thing that really struck me here was actually how many cultural 
heritage organizations were thinking about, or actually implementing, 
some form of open licensing for parts of their collection.

~rufus

Jordan Hatcher's lists wrote:
> Apologies for crossposting
> 
> ____
> 
> With the support and funding of Eduserv, we have completed a study on  
> the use of open content licences in the UK cultural heritage sector.  
> The main focus of the study was on the Creative Commons and Creative  
> Archive licences.
> "Snapshot study on the use of open content licences in the UK  
> cultural heritage sector"
> 
> The survey report, and appendices are available from the study  
> website at:
> 
> <http://www.eduserv.org.uk/foundation/studies/cc2007>
> 
> Thanks!
> 
> ~Jordan
(Continue reading)

Tim Cowlishaw | 20 Nov 13:32
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Gravatar

Re: Survey on open content and the UK cultural heritage sector out

Hi all,

Jordan's going to be discussing this report at this evening's CC- 
Salon in London if anyones interested in attending. Details here:  
http://ccsalon-london.org.uk/?p=9

Thanks!

Tim

On 20 Nov 2007, at 12:21, Rufus Pollock wrote:

> Great work Jordan, and we put up a blog post last friday:
>
> <http://blog.okfn.org/2007/11/16/eduserv-study-on-open-content- 
> licensing-in-cultural-heritage-sector-published/>
>
> The thing that really struck me here was actually how many cultural
> heritage organizations were thinking about, or actually implementing,
> some form of open licensing for parts of their collection.
>
> ~rufus
>
> Jordan Hatcher's lists wrote:
>> Apologies for crossposting
>>
>> ____
>>
>> With the support and funding of Eduserv, we have completed a study on
>> the use of open content licences in the UK cultural heritage sector.
(Continue reading)


Gmane