White House supports CC0 for federal government datasets - Creative Commons

abernard102@gmail.com 2014-05-09

Summary:

"Today the White House released the U.S. Open Data Action Plan, reaffirming their belief that 'freely available data from the U.S. Government is an important national resource… [and] making information about government operations more readily available and useful is also core to the promise of a more efficient and transparent government.' The report (PDF) outlines the commitments to making government data more accessible and useful, and documents how U.S. Federal agencies are sharing federal government information. From a legal standpoint, some agencies have decided to place their datasets into the worldwide public domain using the CC0 Public Domain Dedication. This means that all copyright and related rights to the data are waived, so it may be used by anyone–for any purpose–anywhere in the world–without having to ask permission in advance–and even without needing to give attribution to the author of the data.Use of CC0 for government-resources resources has always been a challenging topic for federal agencies. This is due to the hybrid nature of copyright for federal government works under Section 105 of U.S. copyright law. That statute guarantees that U.S. government works do not receive copyright protection–they are in the public domain. However, while these works are not granted copyright protection inside the U.S., the legislative history of the law notes that the works may receive copyright protection outside of U.S. borders ... Historically, the U.S. government has been apprehensive to apply CC0 to federal government works, because the CC0 Public Domain Dedication is a tool to waive copyright and neighboring rights globally. At the same time, it’s clear that many high-value U.S. government datasets, such as the weather data produced by the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), are being widely (and freely) used by meteorological and research organizations around the world. It seems that in the vast majority of cases, the U.S. Federal government doesn’t care to leverage its copyrights abroad. So perhaps it makes sense to simply clarify that these works will be made available in the worldwide public domain using a standard tool such as CC0. While we had some initial questions about acceptable licenses for federal government information, it seems that agencies are moving in the right direction in utilizing the public domain dedication, as opposed to the other copyright licensing tools that were laid out in Project Open Data ..."

Link:

http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/42643

From feeds:

Gudgeon and gist » Creative Commons » Commons News
Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » abernard102@gmail.com

Tags:

u.s. government public domain project open data open data federal government federal agencies cc0 oa.project_open_data oa.cc oa.pd oa.copyright

Authors:

Timothy Vollmer

Date tagged:

05/09/2014, 19:50

Date published:

05/09/2014, 16:35