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Creative Commons Australia's Documents
Creative Commons for You Program FINAL
Creative Commons for You, and for Government Credits—Photo: ‘The National Library of Australia and the Canberra Balloon Festival, March 2011’ by Grey Nomad Australia, available at <http://www.flickr.com/photos/51743486@N03/5519226596/> and licensed under CC BY 2.0 Generic <http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/deed.en>. Creative Commons (CC) is a new way of managing copyright in the digital environment. It is gaining widespread acceptance and use by creators, educators, cultural instituti
Category:Brochures/CatalogsReads:393Uploaded:10 / 31 / 2011ShareAdd to collectionODG Brisbane DataCamp 23 Sept 2011 Outcomes
Outcomes of Data Camp Workshop Open Government Data Conference Brisbane -‐ 23 September 2011 The following is a list of challenges and opportunities in making open data practices “business-asusual” in Australian government, as developed by Data Camp participants & facilitated by Mark Elliott. Culture Challenges • Internal conflict and lack of leadership (requires a mandate that is o8en missing) • Lack of an ope
Category:(not categorized)Reads:882Uploaded:10 / 07 / 2011ShareAdd to collectionOpen Government Data Conference Program
Open Government Data Conference and Data Camp When: 8.30 am – 4.00 pm Friday 23 September 2011. The conference will be followed immediately by the Data Camp, from 4.00 – 6.00 pm Where: Queensland University of Technology (QUT), Gardens Point Campus, Brisbane ‐ Gibson Room, Z Block, Level 10 (for directions see map at http://www.qut.edu.au/about/campuses‐and‐ precincts/gardens‐point) RSVP: online at http://tiny.cc/OGDBrisbane. If you have issues with registration, please contact Cher
Category:Brochures/CatalogsReads:533Uploaded:09 / 01 / 2011ShareAdd to collectionCC Seminar Sydney 18 Aug 2011
Creative Commons (CC) Sydney Creative Commons (CC) is a new way of managing copyright in the digital environment. It is gaining widespread acceptance and use by creators, educators, researchers, government officers and the general community. If you are interested in finding out about the CC licences, looking for an update on recent developments, or wanting to know how CC licences are being used by others, register now! This seminar by Professor Anne Fitzgerald and Neale Hooper will be held on Th
Category:(not categorized)Reads:292Uploaded:08 / 08 / 2011ShareAdd to collectionCC and Innovation Agenda - Hobart
Creative Commons & the Innovation Agenda Creative Commons (CC) is a new way of managing copyright in the online, digital environment. The standardised CC licences are represented by easily recognised icons that inform users about the copyright status of creative content and how it can be used. CC enables creative materials to be distributed online, discovered and re-mixed while still ensuring that the interests of creators of works are recognised. Since its introduction into Australia in 2005, C
Category:Brochures/CatalogsReads:287Uploaded:08 / 01 / 2011ShareAdd to collectionCC and You - Townsville Flyer
Creative Commons (CC) & You Creative Commons (CC) is a new way of managing copyright in the digital environment. It is gaining widespread acceptance and use by creators, educators, researchers, government officers and the general community. If you are interested in finding out about the CC licences, looking for an update on recent developments, or wanting to know how CC licences are being used by others, register now! This seminar by Professor Anne Fitzgerald and Neale Hooper will be held on Wed
Category:Brochures/CatalogsReads:249Uploaded:07 / 29 / 2011ShareAdd to collectionHow to Attribute CC Materials - (generic fact sheet)
All Creative Commons licences require that users of the work attribute the creator. This is also a requirement under Australian copyright law. This means you always have to acknowledge the creator of the CC work you are using, as well as provide any relevant copyright information. For many users of CC material, attribution is one of the hardest parts of the process. This information pack is designed to help you ensure you are attributing the creator of a CC licensed work in the best possible way.
Category:How-To Guides/ManualsReads:329Uploaded:07 / 11 / 2011ShareAdd to collectionGovernment 2.0 - Theory and Practice - lecturers by Professor Beth Noveck and Professor Brian Fitzgerald
The potential for web based technologies to reshape the role and practice of government is a question of great interest worldwide. In Australia inquiries into Government 2.0 have sought to understand and propose how the “functionality” of Web 2.0 might be used by government in their everyday affairs of making decisions, servicing the community and developing policy. In the USA, as has happened in many other countries, the Obama Administration has set in place strategies to investigate and implement the possibilities of this new landscape of blogs, wikis, social networks and mass collaboration. Professor Noveck has been at the forefront of this work in the USA and internationally. Her book Wiki Government provides conceptual depth to the ideas while her leading role in the Peer to Patent Project and most recently The Open Government Initiative (within the US government) have established her as an expert practitioner in the area. Professor Fitzgerald, a member of the Federal Government’s Gov 2.0 Taskforce in 2009, and his research team at QUT have lead international thinking on new models for licensing of public sector information since their discovery in 2004 that Creative Commons licences could be applied to public sector information. His two volume edited collection on Access to Public Sector Information: Law Technology and Policy is a key resource in this area. In this talk Professors Noveck and Fitzgerald will speak about their involvement in Government 2.0 initiatives in the USA and Australia over the last two years reflecting on what this means for the operation of government and more broadly the general public. They will consider both at a conceptual and practical level arguments for “collaborative government” as a strategy for creating a more effective and democratic system.
Category:Business/LawReads:181Uploaded:06 / 27 / 2011ShareAdd to collectionCC Roadshow 2010 Generic slide set
3/27/2011 Roadshow City Roadshow Creative Commons Roadshow 2010 Roadshow Day, Date Venue and address Be social²Follow @ccAustralia and #CCRdShow10 on Twitter Roadshow City Roadshow Introduction and overview Professor Brian Fitzgerald Co-project Lead, ccAustralia 1 3/27/2011 Roadshow City Roadshow Creative Commons is« About copyright A copyright licence Cannot exist without copyright Roadshow City Roadshow Creative Commons is« A new way of managing copyright ³Emblematic´ of
Category:Business/LawReads:369Uploaded:03 / 28 / 2011ShareAdd to collectionLearning to Teach Online - Case Study: Understanding Creative Commons
By Dr Tama Leaver. Published by the College of Fine Arts at University of New South Wales. Copyright and creative commons is particularly important in the educational context where content is often copied, shared, reused and remixed by both teachers and students in the learning and teaching process. This case study explains the basics of Creative Commons copyright management.
Category:Arts & ArchitectureReads:546Uploaded:03 / 03 / 2011ShareAdd to collection


