Re: [Wikimediaau-l] Fwd: [cc-community] Australian Federal Government commits to CC BY as default

2010-05-04 Thread Craig Franklin
What can I say, this is absolutely awesome!

Will this take effect retroactively, or will it only be new stuff that's
CC-BY?  Either way, it's a tremendous step forward!

-Original Message-
From: wikimediaau-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org
[mailto:wikimediaau-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org] On Behalf Of John
Vandenberg
Sent: Tuesday, 4 May 2010 3:04 PM
To: Wikimedia-au
Cc: Jessica Coates
Subject: [Wikimediaau-l] Fwd: [cc-community] Australian Federal Government
commits to CC BY as default

Woo hoo!

This is fantastic news.  A big thank you to all involved.

-- Forwarded message --
From: Jessica Coates j2.coa...@qut.edu.au
Date: Tue, May 4, 2010 at 11:54 AM
Subject: [cc-community] Australian Federal Government commits to CC BY
as default
To: cc...@lists.ibiblio.org cc...@lists.ibiblio.org,
cc-commun...@lists.ibiblio.org cc-commun...@lists.ibiblio.org,
c...@lists.ibiblio.org c...@lists.ibiblio.org


Big news from the Australian Government on the issue of access to
public sector information.



In an official response released yesterday, the Federal Government has
agreed to 12 of the 13 recommendations to come out of the Government
2.0 Taskforce report released last December – including Recommendation
6.3, which states that Creative Commons Attribution should be the
default licensing position for PSI.



In addition, the government has also agreed that the new Information
Commissioner currently being established will issue guidelines to
ensure that:

§    by default PSI is free, open, and reusable;

§    PSI is released as quickly as possible;

§    PSI may only be withheld where there is a legal obligation
preventing its release.

§    when Commonwealth records become available for public access
under the Archives Act 1983, works covered by Crown copyright will be
automatically licensed under an appropriate open attribution licence.



The response also includes an undertaking that the Attorney-General’s
Department will examine the current state of copyright law with regard
to orphan works (including section 200AB of the Copyright Act 1968),
with the aim of recommending amendments that would remove the
practical restrictions that currently impede the use of such works.



This is the single biggest commitment to CC licensing and open access
principles by Australian government, and should mean that the majority
of Australian government material will soon be available under a CC
licence. The fact that both the response and the announcement have
been released under CC BY is a good start.



The assignment of responsibility for implementation of the commitment
to the new Information Commissioner is also an encouraging move, and
will hopefully see a more coordinated approach to IP policy across the
Australian government as a whole.



The response is available here and a blog post from Finance Minister
Tanner is available here.





Jessica Coates

Project Manager

Creative Commons Clinic and Creative Commons Australia



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Re: [Wikimediaau-l] Fwd: [cc-community] Australian Federal Government commits to CC BY as default

2010-05-04 Thread Craig Franklin
Incidentally, to add some content to my earlier post, here is the
government's official response to the recommendations (which got chopped out
of John's email):

http://www.finance.gov.au/publications/govresponse20report/index.html#recomm
endation-06

As Jessica pointed out, 6.3 is a particularly appealing point, but I'm less
enamoured with their response to 6.7, which essentially says that each
agency gets to choose a licence, which might lead to the more restrictive CC
licences being used (ie: the various -NC options).

Still, this is a massive step in the right direction, so let's hope this
gets up legislatively speaking before the next election.

Cheers,
Craig


-Original Message-
From: wikimediaau-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org
[mailto:wikimediaau-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org] On Behalf Of Craig
Franklin
Sent: Tuesday, 4 May 2010 6:10 PM
To: 'Wikimedia-au'
Subject: Re: [Wikimediaau-l] Fwd: [cc-community] Australian Federal
Government commits to CC BY as default

What can I say, this is absolutely awesome!

Will this take effect retroactively, or will it only be new stuff that's
CC-BY?  Either way, it's a tremendous step forward!

-Original Message-
From: wikimediaau-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org
[mailto:wikimediaau-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org] On Behalf Of John
Vandenberg
Sent: Tuesday, 4 May 2010 3:04 PM
To: Wikimedia-au
Cc: Jessica Coates
Subject: [Wikimediaau-l] Fwd: [cc-community] Australian Federal Government
commits to CC BY as default

Woo hoo!

This is fantastic news.  A big thank you to all involved.

-- Forwarded message --
From: Jessica Coates j2.coa...@qut.edu.au
Date: Tue, May 4, 2010 at 11:54 AM
Subject: [cc-community] Australian Federal Government commits to CC BY
as default
To: cc...@lists.ibiblio.org cc...@lists.ibiblio.org,
cc-commun...@lists.ibiblio.org cc-commun...@lists.ibiblio.org,
c...@lists.ibiblio.org c...@lists.ibiblio.org


Big news from the Australian Government on the issue of access to
public sector information.



In an official response released yesterday, the Federal Government has
agreed to 12 of the 13 recommendations to come out of the Government
2.0 Taskforce report released last December – including Recommendation
6.3, which states that Creative Commons Attribution should be the
default licensing position for PSI.



In addition, the government has also agreed that the new Information
Commissioner currently being established will issue guidelines to
ensure that:

§    by default PSI is free, open, and reusable;

§    PSI is released as quickly as possible;

§    PSI may only be withheld where there is a legal obligation
preventing its release.

§    when Commonwealth records become available for public access
under the Archives Act 1983, works covered by Crown copyright will be
automatically licensed under an appropriate open attribution licence.



The response also includes an undertaking that the Attorney-General’s
Department will examine the current state of copyright law with regard
to orphan works (including section 200AB of the Copyright Act 1968),
with the aim of recommending amendments that would remove the
practical restrictions that currently impede the use of such works.



This is the single biggest commitment to CC licensing and open access
principles by Australian government, and should mean that the majority
of Australian government material will soon be available under a CC
licence. The fact that both the response and the announcement have
been released under CC BY is a good start.



The assignment of responsibility for implementation of the commitment
to the new Information Commissioner is also an encouraging move, and
will hopefully see a more coordinated approach to IP policy across the
Australian government as a whole.



The response is available here and a blog post from Finance Minister
Tanner is available here.





Jessica Coates

Project Manager

Creative Commons Clinic and Creative Commons Australia



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Re: [Wikimediaau-l] Fwd: [cc-community] Australian Federal

2010-05-04 Thread Jessica Coates
Well, the Gov2.0 report itself was very specific that it should be 
retrospective - in fact recommendation 6.5 is all about retroactive licensing 
of already published material.

But the Government response has only agreed to this 'in principle' - they've 
left it up to a set of guidelines to be determined by the Attorney-General's 
Department as to how all this will actually work in practice.

And based on response times from previous reports, I can't imagine we'll see 
the guidelines anytime soon.


Jessica

--

Date: Tue, 4 May 2010 18:10:14 +1000
From: Craig Franklin cr...@halo-17.net
Subject: Re: [Wikimediaau-l] Fwd: [cc-community] Australian Federal
Government  commits to CC BY as default
To: 'Wikimedia-au' wikimediaau-l@lists.wikimedia.org
Message-ID: 009601caeb61$3abcb080$b03611...@net
Content-Type: text/plain;   charset=iso-8859-1

What can I say, this is absolutely awesome!

Will this take effect retroactively, or will it only be new stuff that's
CC-BY?  Either way, it's a tremendous step forward!

-Original Message-
From: wikimediaau-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org
[mailto:wikimediaau-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org] On Behalf Of John
Vandenberg
Sent: Tuesday, 4 May 2010 3:04 PM
To: Wikimedia-au
Cc: Jessica Coates
Subject: [Wikimediaau-l] Fwd: [cc-community] Australian Federal Government
commits to CC BY as default

Woo hoo!

This is fantastic news.  A big thank you to all involved.

-- Forwarded message --
From: Jessica Coates j2.coa...@qut.edu.au
Date: Tue, May 4, 2010 at 11:54 AM
Subject: [cc-community] Australian Federal Government commits to CC BY
as default
To: cc...@lists.ibiblio.org cc...@lists.ibiblio.org,
cc-commun...@lists.ibiblio.org cc-commun...@lists.ibiblio.org,
c...@lists.ibiblio.org c...@lists.ibiblio.org


Big news from the Australian Government on the issue of access to
public sector information.



In an official response released yesterday, the Federal Government has
agreed to 12 of the 13 recommendations to come out of the Government
2.0 Taskforce report released last December ? including Recommendation
6.3, which states that Creative Commons Attribution should be the
default licensing position for PSI.



In addition, the government has also agreed that the new Information
Commissioner currently being established will issue guidelines to
ensure that:

 by default PSI is free, open, and reusable;

 PSI is released as quickly as possible;

 PSI may only be withheld where there is a legal obligation
preventing its release.

 when Commonwealth records become available for public access
under the Archives Act 1983, works covered by Crown copyright will be
automatically licensed under an appropriate open attribution licence.



The response also includes an undertaking that the Attorney-General?s
Department will examine the current state of copyright law with regard
to orphan works (including section 200AB of the Copyright Act 1968),
with the aim of recommending amendments that would remove the
practical restrictions that currently impede the use of such works.



This is the single biggest commitment to CC licensing and open access
principles by Australian government, and should mean that the majority
of Australian government material will soon be available under a CC
licence. The fact that both the response and the announcement have
been released under CC BY is a good start.



The assignment of responsibility for implementation of the commitment
to the new Information Commissioner is also an encouraging move, and
will hopefully see a more coordinated approach to IP policy across the
Australian government as a whole.



The response is available here and a blog post from Finance Minister
Tanner is available here.





Jessica Coates

Project Manager

Creative Commons Clinic and Creative Commons Australia



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Re: [Wikimediaau-l] Fwd: [cc-community] Australian Federal

2010-05-04 Thread Kimberlee Weatherall
Heh. Yes,even drafting guidelines seems to be a bit 'all too hard',
given that we still only have *draft* guidelines from all those urgent
criminal copyright reforms done in 2006 :)

-Original Message-
From: wikimediaau-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org
[mailto:wikimediaau-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org] On Behalf Of Jessica
Coates
Sent: Wednesday, 5 May 2010 11:52 AM
To: wikimediaau-l@lists.wikimedia.org
Subject: Re: [Wikimediaau-l] Fwd: [cc-community] Australian Federal

Well, the Gov2.0 report itself was very specific that it should be
retrospective - in fact recommendation 6.5 is all about retroactive
licensing of already published material.

But the Government response has only agreed to this 'in principle' -
they've left it up to a set of guidelines to be determined by the
Attorney-General's Department as to how all this will actually work in
practice.

And based on response times from previous reports, I can't imagine we'll
see the guidelines anytime soon.


Jessica

--

Date: Tue, 4 May 2010 18:10:14 +1000
From: Craig Franklin cr...@halo-17.net
Subject: Re: [Wikimediaau-l] Fwd: [cc-community] Australian Federal
Government  commits to CC BY as default
To: 'Wikimedia-au' wikimediaau-l@lists.wikimedia.org
Message-ID: 009601caeb61$3abcb080$b03611...@net
Content-Type: text/plain;   charset=iso-8859-1

What can I say, this is absolutely awesome!

Will this take effect retroactively, or will it only be new stuff that's
CC-BY?  Either way, it's a tremendous step forward!

-Original Message-
From: wikimediaau-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org
[mailto:wikimediaau-l-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org] On Behalf Of John
Vandenberg
Sent: Tuesday, 4 May 2010 3:04 PM
To: Wikimedia-au
Cc: Jessica Coates
Subject: [Wikimediaau-l] Fwd: [cc-community] Australian Federal
Government
commits to CC BY as default

Woo hoo!

This is fantastic news.  A big thank you to all involved.

-- Forwarded message --
From: Jessica Coates j2.coa...@qut.edu.au
Date: Tue, May 4, 2010 at 11:54 AM
Subject: [cc-community] Australian Federal Government commits to CC BY
as default
To: cc...@lists.ibiblio.org cc...@lists.ibiblio.org,
cc-commun...@lists.ibiblio.org cc-commun...@lists.ibiblio.org,
c...@lists.ibiblio.org c...@lists.ibiblio.org


Big news from the Australian Government on the issue of access to
public sector information.



In an official response released yesterday, the Federal Government has
agreed to 12 of the 13 recommendations to come out of the Government
2.0 Taskforce report released last December ? including Recommendation
6.3, which states that Creative Commons Attribution should be the
default licensing position for PSI.



In addition, the government has also agreed that the new Information
Commissioner currently being established will issue guidelines to
ensure that:

 by default PSI is free, open, and reusable;

 PSI is released as quickly as possible;

 PSI may only be withheld where there is a legal obligation
preventing its release.

 when Commonwealth records become available for public access
under the Archives Act 1983, works covered by Crown copyright will be
automatically licensed under an appropriate open attribution licence.



The response also includes an undertaking that the Attorney-General?s
Department will examine the current state of copyright law with regard
to orphan works (including section 200AB of the Copyright Act 1968),
with the aim of recommending amendments that would remove the
practical restrictions that currently impede the use of such works.



This is the single biggest commitment to CC licensing and open access
principles by Australian government, and should mean that the majority
of Australian government material will soon be available under a CC
licence. The fact that both the response and the announcement have
been released under CC BY is a good start.



The assignment of responsibility for implementation of the commitment
to the new Information Commissioner is also an encouraging move, and
will hopefully see a more coordinated approach to IP policy across the
Australian government as a whole.



The response is available here and a blog post from Finance Minister
Tanner is available here.





Jessica Coates

Project Manager

Creative Commons Clinic and Creative Commons Australia



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[Wikimediaau-l] grants application this year?

2010-05-04 Thread private musings
G'day all,

does the chapter have any grants proposals heading in this year?

http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:Index

Do we have any structure for creating / supporting a chapter grant like
this?

I have a few ideas and opportunities - for wiki use in education, hopefully
in partnership with nsw dep. of ed. - if I write something up in the next
week or so, I suppose we could discuss it on our wiki, and forward it to the
grants page linked above for consideration if appropriate?

I think it's important for a functioning healthy chapter to try to engage
with processes like this, so if you too have any ideas or opportunities,
please do pipe up, and let's work on them on the wiki, and get them going
:-)

cheers,

Peter,
PM.
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