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...
Jane

2012/5/11 Lodewijk <lodewijk@effeietsanders.org>
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,

Lodewijk

2012/5/11 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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