I am impressed - especially that CC-0, rather than the usual CC-by-SA. Italy seems to be a country of opposing forces in data - it's as if things are either locked up tight or totally wide open, and rarely in between...
Sounds great! Is this something that is public? Andrea, could you or someone from the team write a short blog post about it in the spirit of "what WLM can have for kind of effects" and how you made this happen?Thanks,Lodewijk2012/5/11 Ilario Valdelli <valdelli@gmail.com>
I would share with you this document (http://cortesi.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/simone_cortesi_pavia_wiki_loves_monuments.pdf).
It's a "formal" decision of the local government of the town of Pavia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pavia) to renounce to the Italian law protecting monuments (D.Lgs 42/2004) in order to give to all participants of Wiki Loves Monuments the possibility to take photos of monuments listed in the document.
In addition this a permanent decision, it means that also in future these monuments are under CC-0 license of Creative Commons.
This is a first small success of the outreach activity of Wikimedia Italia within the Wiki loves Monuments activity.
Ilario
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