Creative Commons: Perbedaan antara revisi
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The birth of the Creative Commons is closely related to the concern that the attempts of copyright holders to protect ownership of their copyrighted material are threatening users' freedoms. CC Chairman Lessig, noting the changes that copyright law has undergone (2004b), argued that there has been a shift from "free culture" to a restrictive, permission culture (2004a). When he said free culture, he meant free in the sense of "freedom," not in the sense of "no payment." People used to have freedom to create, to use cultural resources, to criticize others using the culture around them. However, Lessig states that "those freedoms are increasingly restricted. And the question becomes, how do we respond?" (2004b, p. 10). One response that Lessig and others who share the public policy vision have suggested is the Creative Commons, which aims "to build a layer of reasonable, flexible copyright in the face of increasingly restrictive default rules" ("Some Rights Reserved," n.d.).
Although the Creative Commons was suggested by supporters of the public policy vision, it seems to have potential to resolve the boiling conflict between the two visions of copyright law. To be a solution, it must satisfy three conditions: First, it must accurately reflect the ways people produce creative works; second, it must serve the private interests of creators; and third, it must serve the public interests of users.<ref name="CC"> {{en}}[http://jcmc.indiana.edu/vol13/issue1/kim.html Kim, Minjeong. (2007). The Creative Commons and copyright protection in the digital era: Uses of Creative Commons licenses. Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, 13(1), article 10]. <small> Diakses pada 10 Juni 2011</small> </ref>
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