Hi Ziski,
I could actually have some material for you!
In English:
- Video of the conference "Unlocking Value from Digital Heritage Collections", a workshop we supported in Turin in October 2023. The topic was the reuse of images in the public domain. The presentations of the speakers are on Commons
- Simon Tanner, University College London https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Unlocking_value_from_digital_heritage_collections.pdf
- Trilce Navarrete, Erasmus University di Rotterdam https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:The_Value_of_(free)_Digital_Heritage.pdf
- Matthias Sahli, WIPO e University di Neuchatel (Svizzera) https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Digitization_and_Availability_of_Artworks_in_Online_Museum_Collections.pdf
- We also have a couple of videos on some important partnerships we developed over the last years, subtitled in Italian
- Egyptian Museum (we helped them publishing all they digitized collection on Commons): Video (english subtitles available) blob post (in Italian)
- Touring Club Italiano (digitization of maps and picture from their archive, never published before) Video ; blog post
- University of Padua (they hosted two wikimedians in residence, first University in Italy) video
- Diff blog post Open access to heritage images is becoming increasingly difficult in Italy
In Italian:
- How to donate to the Public Domain https://www.wikimedia.it/news/come-donare-al-pubblico-dominio/
- Open Access: the discussion in Italy is still going on https://www.wikimedia.it/news/open-access-la-discussione-in-italia-e-ancora-aperta/
- Mickey Mouse (who in Italian is Topolino) in the Public Domain https://www.wikimedia.it/news/topolino-diventa-di-pubblico-dominio-o-quasi/
We also signed an open letter from Free Software Foundation Europe, on “The right to install any software on any device". Here some updates in English.
I hope you will find something interesting.
Ciao,
Paolo
Il 12/01/2024 23:04, Franziska Putz ha scritto:
Dear all,
I hope you'll forgive me for contacting you yet again in such a short span of time - yet another exciting copyright-related opportunity to share!
An ally of ours, EFF, is organizing Copyright Week from Jan 22 - Jan 26 (see email below). They have asked if there are any blogs that might fit with the themes of this year. These will be shared on social media etc and get a nice boost in coverage. The themes are:
- Public Domain (@Paolo Casagrande)
- AI & Copyright ( @Silvia Gutiérrez & @Giovanna Fontenelle)
- Device & Digital Ownership
- Free Expression and Fair Use (@Mehman Ibragimov, @Justice Okai-Allotey, @Douglas Scott)
- Copyright Enforcement as a Tool of Censorship
Do you have any blogs or published materials that you'd like me to share with the organizers? Please let me know by Wednesday, January 17.
Thank you and have a lovely weekend,
Ziski
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Katharine Trendacosta via Copyright-week <copyright-week@eff.org>
Date: Fri, Jan 12, 2024 at 10:18 AM
Subject: [Copyright-week] Copyright Week 2024
To: public-interest-copyright@publicknowledge.org <public-interest-copyright@publicknowledge.org>, Recreate Coalition <core-copyright-reform-coalition@googlegroups.com>, copyright-week@eff.org <copyright-week@eff.org>
_______________________________________________Hello! We are once again heading up Copyright Week. As usual, feel free to send me any blogs you have that might fit any of the (very broad) topics and we will social them around.
This year, Copyright Week will run from the 22nd to the 26th of January, with each day having a theme. Don’t worry about when your blogs are published, we will just be sharing them on those days.
Jan. 22: Public Domain
The public domain is our cultural commons and a crucial resource for innovation and access to knowledge. Copyright should strive to promote, and not diminish, a robust, accessible public domain.
Jan 23: Device and Digital Ownership
As the things we buy increasingly exist either in digital form or as devices with software, we also find ourselves subject to onerous licensing agreements and technological restrictions. If you buy something, you should be able to truly own it – meaning you can learn how it works, repair it, remove unwanted features, or tinker with it to make it work in a new way.
Jan 24: Copyright and AI
The growing availability of AI, especially generative AI trained on datasetts that include copyrightable material, has raised new debates about copyright law. It’s important to remember the limitations of copyright law in giving the kind of protections creators are looking for.
Jan 25: Free Expression and Fair Use
Copyright policy should encourage creativity, not hamper it. Fair use makes it possible for us to comment, criticize, and rework our common culture.
Jan 26: Copyright Enforcement as a Tool of Censorship
Freedom of expression is a fundamental human right essential to a functioning democracy. Copyright should encourage more speech, not act as a legal cudgel to silence it.
Best,
Katharine
--
Katharine M. Trendacosta (she/her)
Director of Policy and Advocacy
Electronic Frontier Foundation
katharine@eff.org
@k_trendacosta
(415) 436-9333 x190
My working hours may not be yours, I do not expect a response outside of your working hours
Stand up for your digital rights
Copyright-week mailing list
Copyright-week@eff.org
https://mail.eff.org/mailman/listinfo/copyright-week
-- Paolo Casagrande Comunicazione / Communications Wikimedia Italia Dai alla conoscenza libera un nuovo nome. Il tuo, con il tuo 5x1000. CF: 94039910156 www.wikimedia.it