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home · profiles · user: rebecca kahn, icommons reporter

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Rebecca Kahn, iCommons reporter (638)
South Africa
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articles · You Can’t Share What You Don’t Have
24/4/2008 16:37 · 22 votes · no comments
A Closer Look at South Africa’s Social Media Construction Capacity
South Africans have been watching a lot of YouTube lately. And for all the wrong reasons. In February of this year, a story broke about a group of white male students at the University of the Free State, (a traditionally conservative Afrikaans campus in the town of Bloemfontein, the judicial capital of the country)...
articles · Evolution Online
17/4/2008 17:22 · 28 votes · no comments
There's good news for scientists, researchers, students and fans of evolution all over the world - the Darwin Online project, run by Cambridge University and the Charles Darwin Trust are working on putting copies of all of Darwin's published notes, letters and manuscripts into a free online repository, open to anyone who is interested.
At the moment 43,000 pages of searchable...
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calendar· 8th International Conference on the Law Via The Internet
10/7/2007 20:58 · 1 comment
This conference, catering primarily to lawyers examines themes relating to doctrine, document preservation and legal information overload. Doctrine and its production and publication are very high profile. Indeed, issues related to documents that complement primary sources of law are certainly the next frontier. Preservation of both pre-digital law and that born today in digital...
articles · Organisation Spotlight: Safe Creative
24/4/2008 19:12 · no comments
A few years ago Juan Palacio, a Spanish software expert, wrote a book and wanted to share it on the Internet as a PDF document. This got him wondering whether it is possible to register the file’s original creator, and after some research he found that in his native country this was not possible unless he printed the book out on paper first. The lack of facilities to register digital...
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articles · Colombian ruling on copyright: Without profit there is no criminal offence
by carobotero · voted on 15/5/2008 17:41 · 24 votes · 5 comments
In a landmark ruling, the Supreme Court of Colombia, the highest criminal judicial tribunal and Cassation Court (deals with the Cassation procedures also known in other juridical traditions as right of appeal on points of law), determined that in order to establish a criminal violation of copyright, it is necessary to find if the criminal conduct is for profit-making, if it causes...
articles · Collating online collections. Study of 13 cultural heritage collections online
by Francis Deblauwe · voted on 5/5/2008 19:52 · 23 votes · no comments
More and more museums and other cultural heritage organizations are offering online access to their holdings. These initiatives are varied in scope, depth and target audience. They also take different approaches to copyright and open access, esp. regarding photos of art and artifacts in their care.
Sample
For this limited investigation, I selected a more or less random sample...
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articles · Colombian ruling on copyright: Without profit there is no criminal offence
by carobotero · commented on 15/5/2008 17:43 · 24 votes · 5 comments
In a landmark ruling, the Supreme Court of Colombia, the highest criminal judicial tribunal and Cassation Court (deals with the Cassation procedures also known in other juridical traditions as right of appeal on points of law), determined that in order to establish a criminal violation of copyright, it is necessary to find if the criminal conduct is for profit-making, if it causes...
articles · Why do I need to CC?
by anas · commented on 18/3/2008 19:04 · 26 votes · 1 comment
This has typically been the ending question for any Creative Commons-related conversation in the Middle East that I have been involved in. While drawing on others' experiences and telling success stories from other parts of the world would seem a very appealing answer, there is always the “but here, it does not work like that” aspect of the argument. Well, today I think we have...
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