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- Published: 17 Jun 2008
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- Author: ArneBab
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Free content encompasses all works in the public domain and also those copyrighted works whose licenses honor and uphold the freedoms mentioned above. Because copyright law in most countries by default grants copyright holders monopolistic control over their creations, copyrighted content must be explicitly declared free, usually by the referencing or inclusion of licensing statements from within the work.
Though a work which is in the public domain because its copyright has expired is considered free, it can become non-free again if the copyright law changes.
Traditional copyright control, when compared to free content, is limiting in several ways. It limits the use of the work of the author to those who can, or are willing to, afford the payment of royalties to the author for usage of the authors content, or limit their use to fair use. Secondly it limits the use of content whose author cannot be found. Finally it creates a perceived barrier between authors by limiting derivative works, such as mashups and collaborative content. Copyleft is based on the belief that the temporary publishing monopoly that traditional copyright created in order to encourage science and learning is not actually the best way to promote science and learning.
A symbol commonly associated with copyleft is a reversal of the copyright symbol, facing the other way; the opening of the C points left rather than right. Unlike the copyright symbol, the copyleft symbol does not have a codified meaning.
Technology has reduced the cost of publication and reduced the entry barrier sufficiently to allow for the production of widely disseminated materials by individuals or small groups. Projects to provide free literature and multimedia content have become increasingly prominent owing to the ease of dissemination of materials that is associated with the development of computer technology. Such dissemination may have been too costly prior to these technological developments.
Open source development models have been classified as having a similar peer-recognition and collaborative benefit incentives that are typified by more classical fields such as scientific research, with the social structures that result from this incentive model decreasing production cost.
Given sufficient interest in a given software component, by using peer-to-peer distribution methods, distribution costs of software may be minimized, removing the burden of infrastructure maintenance from developers. As distribution resources are simultaneously provided by consumers, these software distribution models are scalable, that is the method is feasible regardless of the number of consumers. In some cases, free software vendors may use peer-to-peer technology as a method of dissemination.
Technologies such as distributed manufacturing can allow computer-aided manufacturing and computer-aided design techniques to be able to develop small-scale production of components for the development of new, or repair of existing, devices. Rapid fabrication technologies underpin these developments, which allow end users of technology to be able to construct devices from pre-existing blueprints, using software and manufacturing hardware to convert information into physical objects.
For teaching purposes, some universities provide freely available course content, such as lecture notes, video resources and tutorials. This content is distributed via internet resources to the general public. Publication of such resources may be either by a formal institution-wide program, or alternately via informal content provided by individual academics or departments.
For example, an author may choose to release their work into the public domain, and thus this may be freely used by anyone for any purpose, including commercial entities. This approach is criticised by those who perceive that commercial entities can thus sell these works without performing any useful service to the public, thus effectively restricting the content; this may be exacerbated if there is no requirement for the commercial vendor to disclose the public domain nature of the work. Subsequently a more "free" distribution, which technically has greater legal restrictions on use, could be utilised to enforce the requirement that vendors acknowledge the free nature of the work. Taking this even further, it may be that the work could be used as a component in a larger work; this is particularly true for works of a technical nature.
In such a case, the additional restriction on the free work to require derivative works that include the original free work can be made, such that the derived work must also be distributed in a free manner. This subset of free licenses are sometimes referred to as viral copyright licenses or Copyleft licenses and applies to licenses that contain a clause stating that any works derived from a free work must themselves be free when distributed, usually under the same license. This requirement may be criticised as legally constraining and therefore in some manner rendering the use of the "free" appellation inappropriate.
An example of one of these "viral licenses" is the GNU General Public License, which is often applied to computer programs. The viral nature of these licenses are seen as applying the ideology of the original licensor on subsequent redistributors. The criticism stems over a disagreement over the scope of freedom that licenses should attempt to enforce. That is whether licenses should aim to provide absolute freedom (to do whatever you please) versus an inalienable freedom (freedom to do anything but take away the freedom of another).
Alternatively, the economic model of free content is seen as a collaborative environment in which works are generated by authors themselves and then released with a free content licence. Subsequently, the economic sagacity of this model has been questioned. However, such criticism has, in itself, been seen as an expression of the changing role of the author in commercialisation of their works.
Category:Copyright licenses Category:Digital art Category:Libre Category:Open source licenses
This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
Name | Jimmy Wales |
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Caption | Wales in December 2008 |
Birth name | Jimmy Donal Wales |
Birth date | August 07, 1966 |
Birth place | Huntsville, AlabamaUnited States |
Nationality | American |
Other names | Jimbo (online alias) |
Known for | Co-founding Wikipedia |
Website | Blog.JimmyWales.com |
Wales had a brief relationship with Canadian conservative columnist Rachel Marsden in 2008 that began after Marsden contacted Wales about her Wikipedia biography. and according to The Atlantic Monthly it "found itself positioned as the Playboy of the Internet". Nonetheless, the cadre of early editors helped create a robust, self-regulating community that has proven conducive to the growth of the project.
Category:1966 births Category:American bloggers Category:American businesspeople Category:American libertarians Category:Ashoka USA Fellows-2010 Category:Auburn University alumni Category:Berkman Fellows Category:History of Wikipedia Category:Indiana University alumni Category:Living people Category:Objectivists Category:People from Huntsville, Alabama Category:People from St. Petersburg, Florida Category:Recipients of the Gottlieb Duttweiler Prize Category:University of Alabama alumni Category:WEF YGL honorees Category:Wikia Category:Wikimedia Foundation Category:Wikimedia Foundation Board of Trustees members
This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
Name | Hermeto Pascoal |
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Landscape | yes |
Background | non_vocal_instrumentalist |
Born | June 22, 1936, Arapiraca, Alagoas, Brazil |
Instrument | keyboards, button accordion, melodica, saxophone, flute, others |
Genre | Brazilian traditions, jazz, forró |
Hermeto Pascoal (born June 22, 1936) is a Brazilian composer and multi-instrumentalist. He was born in Lagoa da Canoa, Alagoas, Brazil. Pascoal is a greatly beloved musical figure in the history of Brazilian music, known for his abilities at orchestration and improvisation, as well as being a record producer and contributor to many other Brazilian and international albums.
Known as o Bruxo (the Sorcerer), Hermeto often makes music with unconventional objects such as teapots, children's toys, and animals, as well as keyboards, button accordion, melodica, saxophone, guitar, flute, voice, various brass and folkloric instruments. Perhaps because he grew up in the countryside, he uses nature as a basis for his compositions, as in his Música da Lagoa, in which the musicians burble water and play flutes while immersed in a lagoon: a Brazilian television broadcast from 1999 showed him soloing at one point by singing into a cup with his mouth partially submerged in water. Folk music from rural Brazil is another important influence in his work.
Between 1996 and 1997, Hermeto surprised the musical world with a book project, Calendário do Som, which contains a song for every day of the year, including 29 February, so that everyone would have a song for his or her birthday.
He and his wife Aline Morena currently live in her hometown, Curitiba, Paraná, Brazil.
Category:People from Alagoas Category:Samba musicians Category:Brazilian jazz (genre) flautists Category:Brazilian jazz (genre) pianists Category:Brazilian jazz (genre) guitarists Category:Brazilian jazz (genre) saxophonists Category:Latin jazz flautists Category:Latin jazz pianists Category:Latin jazz guitarists Category:Latin jazz saxophonists Category:People with albinism Category:Miles Davis Category:Brazilian jazz pianists Category:Brazilian jazz composers Category:Brazilian jazz keyboardists Category:Brazilian multi-instrumentalists Category:Melodica players Category:Brazilian composers Category:1936 births Category:Living people Category:Brazilian saxophonists
This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.