The paper is about recent national and European legislation on data re-use. It argues time has come to realize that Open Access and copyright ought not to oppose each other. They should instead nd ways to balance each other. Open Access is necessary for government-spon- sored data. The industrial and creative industry cannot simply give up copyright. It must keep to it in order to survive on the market. On the other side, the industrial and creative industry ought to be enabled to make use of government-sponsored data. Legislation is on the way
This paper is focused on one of the less well known aspects of the ArchAIDE project: the open-data p...
A defining characteristic of contemporary copyright law is the willingness of governments to accept ...
Open Access’ main goal is not the subversion of publishers’ role as driving actors in an oligopolist...
The paper is about recent national and European legislation on data re-use. It argues time has come ...
The recent report of the “Comité des Sages” recommends that “cultural institutions should make publi...
In the past year, a number of legal developments have accelerated discussions around whether intelle...
Conference paper following the presentation "Copyright and open licenses for data" at the Swiss Rese...
Open data is fuel for the future economy. Opening and sharing data owned by public bodies, communiti...
Digital technology has made culture more accessible than ever before. Texts, audio, pictures and vid...
International audienceOpen Data is an important public policy that contributes to achieving greater ...
The Green route to Open Access (OA), meaning the re-publication in OA venues of previously published...
This paper seeks to explore how the implementation of open access licences onto recordings and other...
Open source, open content and open access are set to fundamentally alter the conditions of knowledge...
Digital technology has made culture more accessible than ever before. Texts, audio, pictures and vid...
Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license availabl...
This paper is focused on one of the less well known aspects of the ArchAIDE project: the open-data p...
A defining characteristic of contemporary copyright law is the willingness of governments to accept ...
Open Access’ main goal is not the subversion of publishers’ role as driving actors in an oligopolist...
The paper is about recent national and European legislation on data re-use. It argues time has come ...
The recent report of the “Comité des Sages” recommends that “cultural institutions should make publi...
In the past year, a number of legal developments have accelerated discussions around whether intelle...
Conference paper following the presentation "Copyright and open licenses for data" at the Swiss Rese...
Open data is fuel for the future economy. Opening and sharing data owned by public bodies, communiti...
Digital technology has made culture more accessible than ever before. Texts, audio, pictures and vid...
International audienceOpen Data is an important public policy that contributes to achieving greater ...
The Green route to Open Access (OA), meaning the re-publication in OA venues of previously published...
This paper seeks to explore how the implementation of open access licences onto recordings and other...
Open source, open content and open access are set to fundamentally alter the conditions of knowledge...
Digital technology has made culture more accessible than ever before. Texts, audio, pictures and vid...
Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license availabl...
This paper is focused on one of the less well known aspects of the ArchAIDE project: the open-data p...
A defining characteristic of contemporary copyright law is the willingness of governments to accept ...
Open Access’ main goal is not the subversion of publishers’ role as driving actors in an oligopolist...