Consider CREATIVE COMMONS
Posted: Tue Jul 12, 2011 11:33 pm
At the Festival of Nations this year I saw an excellent film about young people who are being treated for cancer. They spoke openly about how they got on with their schoolfriends and about their feelings.
The film ended with a CC licence - that means it is available for others to use in a non-commercial way without payment. I specifically asked the author about it and he intended that any teacher, parent or youth leader who wanted to show the film, should be free to do so without worry about seeking out the director for permission or indulging in piracy.
That film was in Austrian, so not much use to English-speakers ... but the principle of making our work legally available to others seems to me worth exploring.
You can read about the scheme/s at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creative_Commons_licenses and http://creativecommons.org/
I have often teased non-commercial film makers who add copyright symbols to their films - don't they want other people to see and enjoy them? Maybe adding the CC symbol of Creative Commons would give them the protection they want, let them retain some rights and yet allow wider use of the movies ...
Good idea?
Dave
The film ended with a CC licence - that means it is available for others to use in a non-commercial way without payment. I specifically asked the author about it and he intended that any teacher, parent or youth leader who wanted to show the film, should be free to do so without worry about seeking out the director for permission or indulging in piracy.
That film was in Austrian, so not much use to English-speakers ... but the principle of making our work legally available to others seems to me worth exploring.
You can read about the scheme/s at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creative_Commons_licenses and http://creativecommons.org/
I have often teased non-commercial film makers who add copyright symbols to their films - don't they want other people to see and enjoy them? Maybe adding the CC symbol of Creative Commons would give them the protection they want, let them retain some rights and yet allow wider use of the movies ...
Good idea?
Dave