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I am in favor of using Public domain media even without a PDM or CC0 marks. There is currently a large body of very high-quality media that are published on Wikimedia and Flickr by GLAM1 institutions that do not have PDM or CC0. And I believe we will serve our users better if we do include this type of media. It might be a good idea to consult with lawyers, though. Or at least to see what these providers give as justification for including non-PDM or CC0 works in their collections. Footnotes
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The fact that Flickr is comfortable showing these images makes me less worried about legal implications. I think this is more of a philosophical questions, if we want to 'support'/'endorse' the non-PDM public domain, whatever that is lol. |
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I'm really interested in knowing how works are classified in "No Known Copyright Restrictions" (NKCR) as this is key in determining in which sense they are open, seems to be mostly a legacy term to encapsulate works with unknown or uncommon licenses, in order to be included in collections as we intend to do here. The same Flickr report says:
Given the nature of copyright, each work has all rights reserved unless there is a license in which the author explicitly releases them. Some of these works might have less common non-CC licenses, which case makes me wonder: will we provide instructions on how to cite/use such works? I think we should do it, bring clarity instead of keep carrying confusion. This is where we would need a legal person dedicated to analyze licenses and their permissions. If a work is confirmed to be of Public Domain (basically means no rights reserved, zero!) in one jurisdiction then I think we can include it, as it means the author(s) are willing to cede the rights (or most probably they are dead a long time ago) and the final "mark" as the public domain is mostly a bureaucracy thing, but if the license of the work is unknown I definitely believe it should be not included until its licensing is clarified. |
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Currently, Openverse does not include public domain works unless they use the Public Domain Mark
PDM
tool from Creative Commons1. This is because without PDM, a work may be:in one jurisdiction, but could in others. Here are CC's recommendations for when not to use
PDM
in their entirety2:We need to decide if we want to continue this practice or support these works.
Footnotes
Public Domain Mark 1.0 ↩
PDM Guidelines ↩
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