Tuesday, March 29, 2011

LL & CC: Lawrence Lessig and Creative Commons


A Mash-up by Margie Manlunas (non-profit, school requirement)

CREATIVE COMMONS
Spread the word.


Thank you to the owners of the videos used:
Prof. Lawrence Lessig Explains Creative Commons Licensing
Lawrence Lessig: "Don't Mess This Up, California." Pass ...
Lessig Remix
A Shared Culture
LADY GAGA - Born This Way (Cover)
2010 Again (Mashup of 36 Billboard hits from 2010) - DJ McFLY
What is Creative Commons? Wanna Work Together RG Remix
All Creative Work Is Derivative
Larry Lessig: How creativity is being strangled by the law (TED)
Music: Phoenix - Lisztomania (Inspired from Lessig's video in TED)
Thank you very much LL!

5 comments:

  1. Binabati kita Margie sa iyong pagpipresenta ng iyong blog. Ang ganda ng pagkaka-edit at hindi ko inaasahan na ganito ang pagkakalatag ng iyong ideya tungkol sa paksa ng Copyright, ang galing. Sa tingin ko ang mga ganitong uri ng araling biswal ang dapat na pinoprodyus lalo na para sa mga mag-aaral ng elemntarya at high school pati na rin para sa mga mag-aaral ng kolehiyo upang higit nilang maunawaan ang isyu ng copyright at ang creative commons.

    Para sa akin ang laman ng iyong mash-up ay isang pag-i-empower sa mga taong nais pang mapalawak ang kanilang pagkamalikhain at pati na rin ang kanilang kalayaan sa paggamit ng mga akdang di kanila.

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  2. Just in time, we we're discussing the copyright law sa Media Law class. And Sir Chito was discussing the internet sphere when it comes into copyright. May code pala na formulated, something that sounds like electronic copyright something...forgot it. Haha. I mentioned him about the creative commons and the free culture but being the Chito Avecilla that he is, he did not seem to entertain the idea. Hahaha.

    Anyhoo, I hope we really have this massive change of mindset when it comes into actually freeing our culture. :)

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  3. This can be shown in a class or somewhere. :) Or, actually, there should be a viral video about creative commons, cause a lot of people really don't know it exists. Elem or highschoolers should be educated about it, and yeah, college students din pala. Like, there should be a movement on web literacy talaga noh? I actually found an NGO here in the Phils. that advocates on web literacy. It's right over at Katipunan. It's FMA or Foundation for Media Alternatives, here's the site. www.fma.ph Maybe we could really work out something w/ this NGO, or for the next classes, I'm planning on joining in it too, once I have enough time. Anyway, kudos kudos to this. It gave me an idea. :)

    F.Recile

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  4. I agree with Faith. This is the type of thing that most digital natives must be informed of. Like what Lawrence Lessig mentioned in one lecture, we are living in a world of creative commons wherein compared to the intellectual commons, we use existing works and turn into something even more promising and creative.

    I really like his idea about the creative commons and choosing what type of 'copyright' would you want your works be classified. Through that, you are not depriving anyone the chance to critic or glorify your ideas and your creativity and at the same time you are able to protect your own ideas and materials.

    Good job, Marji! this is really a great video. :)

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  5. CYBERDWENDE! NOW! HAHA.

    Thing is, yun nga, one of the prevailing issues on the web's "efficiency" is the burden of licensing and copyrighting. Like we have discussed before, some sites (and programs) actually do something about this other than the CC, like DRM (Digital Rights Management IIRC) and copyright encryption ba or something? Pero by far the creative commons is the least restricting of them all. Somehow, at least, information still circulates almost unhindered through that.

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