Posts Tagged ‘icommons’

green dust blue

October 3, 2008


green dust blue

Originally uploaded by jamtea

its interesting though about the whole free-culture outside the US, it seems that free-culture is looking to be funded via the state. well at least all the admin operations, so does that mean that mechanism behind free-culture is fed through the government.

so the government build more trains for the first class passengers. i had hoped that free-culutre also means the right to do as you choose with what you create. yet being able to only license using the CC licenese and be a member of a rights organization outside the us does not make sense. it seems that ideas for artists might also move on the artists http://www.owntems.org the universal blanket license for eternity is sometimes to much for the artists. how about the universal blanket license for the local pub, that the artists can turn on and off when he feels like it?

Creative Commons might at least give merit to the other ideas, or would that be competition in a monopoly circumstance?

proove me wrong and put project applications in place via some of the CC affiliates outside of the US that are funded through the state to get moving on these kind of ideas? maybe i have it wrong though, another good pipe dream.

free-culture= free to do what you want with what you create.

not free to make it free only under a creative commons license, yet its interesting. i’m not worried about the CC license, yet maybe this article above shows an argument that might get thrown at you guys from time to time. how can you have a summit for free culutre within a blanket license and no definiftion within the law of what is non-commercial and what is commercial?

anyway i find it intersting, cause in all the time i have been using these CC liceses, i still can’t get free legal advice. both sides seem the same as they have a political agenda, ultimatley the artists uses the tools that are available to her/him to get what they made heard. So i have to wonder if CC within the blanket admin of APRA is such a good thing. Is it not unfair to other licenes that might want to exist?

the meat market of free culutre and career termination.

August 11, 2008

Most artists when they use a Creative Commons license create a non-commercial one. Most music artists also don’t understand that in most countries all public performance is considered to be commercial by the laws in that country. No laws exist anywhere within a country that says this is non-commercial and this is commercial, that i know of yet. Yet tell me if there is one?

The result is that a grey zone has appeared around the Creative Commons Non-Commercial license, that makes it less likely for the artists art to be used in a lot of ways, if they use this license.

My view is that the artists is being given bad information about the effects of the license on music art via Creative Commons, via way of possible manipulation by some of the business models around the license.

Business models like Magnitune, Beatpick and Jamendo work on an understanding that most artists are going to use a Creative Commons license that does not allow Commercial use. What does Jamendo do, well they create agreements that are going to give 50 percent of commercial use to the artists and 50 percent to Jamendo.

What Jamendo seem to forget is that the rights organizations offer a much better rate for use of the artists tune than than Jamendo have in place, only the rights organizations don’t do any promotion for the art. Jamendo sent out a letter to their artists saying that unless they faxed a document to to say that their tunes were not with a rights organization, they would not be able to participate in the jamba royalty share program. An artist that is getting nothing from a rights organization and nothing from the sale of tunes through the net and unable to get a live performance, does have access to a fax machine.

The royalty share program started off being a split in advertising revenue from the site through google banners. The project then swung into many other avenues and Jamendo have incorporated many other different licenses into their system. What i can’t figure out is this, why want free-culture just develop a non-profit to help the artists publish as a community. What upsets  me more, to go on about it, is that Jamendo Magnitune and Beatpick are involved in many of the launches of CC through-out Europe of the Creative Commons license.

Jamendo is part owned by the company that started up skype. Jamendo, Beatpick or Magnitune have little to do with free-culture from my view, or less and less as time goes on. It seems to be about bottom line revenues and the CC license is used to make what is happening look fair. Because of revenue streams that have been created from royalty share program, information becomes a threat to their business models. Information like, artist’s in Europe can use a CC license and join ASCAP. Artists with ASCAP can license what they create freely, join ASCAP if you want to make your tunes free.

Also, its only in the last couple of months that i have come to understand that for a contract to be executed, a contract has to do a round turn. What does this mean? well it means that the CEO of a company (or some representative) has to sign a contract with the artist. This means that the company is best to send 2 contracts to the artist and the artist send 2 back and then the artist be sent one from the company, for reference and to complete the agreement. Its especially important from the point of view of the company that is working with beatpick that this happens. The internet works in a different way, as the artist is able to login and remove art from a site like myspace or jamendo. Yet beatpick is dealing with licensing music to large films and TV.

My guess is that if beat-pick sent contracts in the mail, that the artists would be more likely to show the contract to a lawyer. Most lawyers would point out the implications to artists associated with the non-commercial use and the realities of future publishing opportunities for those works and all the works of the artist. This may not bother some, yet others might move in another direction. Having a situation where the artist prints out one contract and sends/fax’s it in, means that its less likely that much is going to go wrong from the point of view of beatpick. Artists like myself that only send in one copy of a contract are artists that have not done many contracts.

Over the last couple of months i’ve figured how it works a little little more. Owning a part of copyright is like owning a house or anything, you can’t own something without having a structured agreement that says so. Having the right to license rights that are part of a copyright means that the company needs structured contract and those contracts need to do a round turn.

Both Jamendo, Magnitune & Beatpick’s business models are based on more and more artists using the non-commercial licenses. The business model i suggest to artists is based on artists making recordings, finding that there is no market value for the work, and then making that recording available free under a creative commons license, to the global commons that allows commercial use. I made my works available to the global commons, yet then the works found a value, i never anticipated this.

Its interesting that the system is structured in such a way that when any music is used in a commercial context a royalty is paid anyway, so an artists with ASCAP is able to collect for the use of a song and also have the song licensed to the global commons freely. Yet this seems only possible for ASCAP & BMI members, its good information for any artists outside the US to know that they can join ASCAP. It was partly accidental that i found this out, in effect this means when art is used in a commercial context with the creative commons license, that a royalty can be collected. Attribution is something the rights organizations are not set up to police.

The implications of the non-commercial license are complex in many way, as are the commercial ones, yet the commercial one seems straight forward to the user and its important that artists art does get a chance to be a part of the market place. If that was the intention of the artist. An un-known artist putting a non-commercial license on their songs, could potentially prevent the art from being picked up by a publisher. The NC license is a license best described as a license for artists that don’t want their songs used in a corporate context, that’s the way i see it.

Anyway, i’m writing this in my blog, cause when i told beatpick that i no-longer wanted to be with them. The CEO of beatpick wrote this to me at the end of his email.

“contract will be terminated and any activities regarding your career will be stopped.”

I’m not sure if this is because the CEO of Beatpick has a bad understand of English, or if he believes he is a living extension of the god-father (or is). If I’m suddenly deleted from the planet through any means whosoever in the near future, someone read this blog. I did not understand when i signed with this fair-play music label on the internet that my whole career would be controlled by beatpick, these guys don’t even do live gigs.

As artists can license their author rights and sound recordings as they choose and be with a rights organization in the US, the creative commons license seems more relivant to music artists outside the US. I hope more business models evolve that are more upfront about the reality of the license. The licenses are great, yet i reckon the artists need good information about what license is going to work for them.

Paul Kellar talks about creative commons

August 3, 2008

is it worth standing in front of a bulldozer to save a tree?

March 5, 2008

jamteaCreative Commons are asking people for feedback on policy

CC/ iCommons is looking (from a distance) to be moving towards the corporations rather than the artist. Policy of iCommons is directed to those who create pools of content rather than users. The problem might be that most of the funds CC/iCommons get don’t come via individuals yet from larger corporations/organizations. CC has business people on the board. yet these people look at content from a business perspective not from that of an artist. From a far out view it looks like the same thing is going on a different plate.

who is going to decide what a non-commercial use is. The corporations or the people? The more people that use CC licenses the more important the organization is.

creative commons and rights organizations

February 14, 2008

its interesting that last.fm are now collecting royalties for self published artists not with rights organizations. This really shows where things might be headed. With all the abuse that CC get from the rights organization, i wonder why CC should help them integrate the license. If the rights organizations are forced to adapt the license without CC, then they have to use the legal framework of the license as it is. In Australia APRA is already wanting government radio/schools to be excluded. Thats the kind of pressure that they are putting on CC au. My view is that unless the rights organization adapt the license under terms of a non-commercial use that the CC community agree is a non-commercial use, then CC should not help the rights organizations in any way.

canada rights organization

January 29, 2008

i read this at this link

In Canada the songs organization want to put a 60 dollar tax on every net connection and allow free file sharing. my response that seemed to have got lost in a huge ocean of response. My response was this.

what about art that people want to give away free. why would people pay for that? seems like a law not fair to artists not with labels and publishers. good law for the bureaucracy. what rights organizations tend to forget is that people are just not buying as much content as they used to. people are making more content at home. technology has changed yet the laws have stayed the same. these rights organizations were created for the publishers not the artists. with the net we don’t need them publishers or labels anymore.

we also don’t need them political people making decisions that make life better for corporations than people. what to do?

what is Icommons?

January 10, 2008

At this link find a description of how to build a bottom-up social movement. At this link find an article on how Icommons sees itself governed. At this link find a letter written by Mike Shaver Chief Evangelist at the Mozilla Corporation.

Mike Shaver writes:”Creative Commons has produced a set of licenses that helps not only software developers, but photographers, musicians, authors, bloggers, videographers, poets, DJs, painters , documenters, and journalists. This means that anyone who produces a creative work, which is virtually everyone on the planet, can share their work in ways that they choose.”

On this Icommons wiki you’ll see that a community governance is being drafted. There is no wiki asking the community to be involved in creating any kind of ideology that governs Icommons (yet?).

If you view this link find a call for the summit to more scientific. At this link you’ll find science has it own commons. At this link find an article that asks what is art to Icommons.

If the Icommons mission currently is “iCommons.org’s mission is to provide a valuable service to the global commons community by providing valuable information and networking tools to the social entrepreneurs that make up this movement.”

How many social entrepreneurs within the Icommons community depend on using creative commons licenses to distribute their art/creativity? How many intellectuals/ creators/ artists define themselves as social entrepreneurs? What about the valuable information and networking tools for the people that Mike Shaver from Mozilla mentions?

According to an interview at this link link Ronaldo Lemos chairman of Icommons says. “Icommons is made for those connected to creative commons …..Icommons is the movement creative commons is the legal project”.

If creative commons is the legal project, why does creative commons not have a meeting that brings the lawyers together? If Science Commons is focused on the intellectauls within the movement…? Does’nt it makes sense for Icommons to bring the users of the licenses together as the main focus each year?

Is the creative commons movement made up by those that licenses their creativity with creative commons license or by those that create bureaucracy? According to the description of “how to build a bottom-up social movement”. Step 2 Appoint (not elect) members of the board and employees.

A festival that brought creators that used creative commons licenses and those that create platforms for that creativity could happen in many different parts of the world at different times of each year. Its a huge expense to fly people from all around the world to a remote part of Japan to gather and talk about free culture. Are plans in place to make this a carbon neutral event? How do those outside this movement view this? What of the non-professional/ part time/ full time artists & creators that have an interest in this movement?

Last FM Creative Commons

November 29, 2007

A couple of months back this thread started on a last FM’s forum. Today I noticed that last.fm in conjunction with Mozilla is sponsoring an event that celebrates five years of Creative Commons.

Now if an artist, label or publisher tags their song with the words Creative Commons, the song goes into the Creative Commons charts. Read this thread for more information. For now artists or net labels are not able to upload using any type of Creative Commons licenses; a Creative Commons chart within last.FM’s system is a good step forward.

How last FM works ?

Type in the name of your favorite artist… into the last FM search engine. You are then taken to a page that says “Now playing:… Similar Artists”. The first track you listen to is the artist you choose, then to similar artists, example. The user has the option of clicking on a heart button to say weather they like the track playing or not, by doing this you create your own play list. The next artists playing is a different artist and so on. Each band or artist playing has a buy link that the listener can visit. Last FM has no advertising brakes, this sets last.fm apart from all other forms of music radio media.

Last.fm’s revenue.

Last Fm’s revenue comes from banners and preferences given to content played.

Information from last.fm’s website.

* 100 impressions for $20.00
* 500 impressions for $100.00
* 1,000 impressions for $200.00
* 2,000 impressions for $400.00

Book a Powerplay campaign to target a set amount of radio plays for a track to a specific group of users. After you’ve run your Powerplay campaign, you will be able to access statistics of how your track has been received.

Pay and be heard.

Artist’s label’s and publisher’s are able to “pay and be heard” on last FM. In Australia it is illegal to “pay and be heard” on radio. Its the responsibility of a programmer to decide what is played and what is not. A publisher, artist or label is able to bring content to the station. Its upto the radio network to pay the programmer to do her or his job. Last FM may be just a little closer to the reality of the music business.

Rights for use of content?

Last.fm have to pay the rights organizations for use of content, last.fm does not ask the artist when they become a member of their service, if they are a member of a rights organization or not. This means last.fm most likely pay a blanket license fee for the use of content. When an artist not with a rights organization is being played on last.fm, last.fm still pay for use of that content. Its possible that a fair chunk of last.fm’s revenue goes towards paying rights organizations. How are the rights organizations going to react when Creative Commons content is played via last.fm in non-profit spaces. If these organization only play content from the CC last.FM charts they be in a situation where they would not have to pay for use of this content.

A self publishing artist using last FM, why?

The last.fm system looks to support the established publishing/label industry. The system gives the opportunity for un-known artists to tap into the fan bass of a well-known established artists with a similar style and possibly sell music through i-tunes, paypal, cdbaby, amazon…. For an artist to be heard beyond the community of people that she or he comes in direct contact with, seems to be an expensive process. Creative Commons charts could change this.

Free culture & rights organizations?

People like music without hearing advertisements. With wifi moving everywhere is last.fm going to last? As the last.fm system gets more and more popular, the cost for the use of content might go up. Listening to radio without having commercial brakes gives last.fm a competitive edge in the market place, this might be seen as un-fair. Are publishers, artists & labels (companies that use banners) going to bring in enough revenue to pay for the use of this content? Could last.fm be shut down by the right organizations?

Music business.

The music business looks to have turned from the exploitation of the public for revenue to that of the “self publishing” artist. The explosion in artistic content created, fueled by the net and an explosion in technology, makes the exploitation of unrealistic dreams a good business. Its good business for the music business to maintain low standards of content within the market. “Pay and be heard”, pay this and our festival might consider you for a performance. Pay 20 dollars for your song to be reviewed. Put three songs on an album written by famous artists so public might find your content on i-tunes. Where does free-culture fit into all this?

Buma Stemra Art Pirates

November 14, 2007

Recently I called up Buma/Stemra (Dutch collection society) to find out more information about the Creative Commons pilot project. Read the press release here. The project was initiated by the Creative Commons team in the Netherlands, this mail thread explains more.

What I understood after the conversation was this: its as difficult to change what a commercial use is for art licensed with Creative Commons licenses (for members of rights organizations) as it is to create a ‘license back situation’ for all artist members. From what I understand a license back situation would allow the artists to deal with their rights as they choose, yet still participate in the collecting system where the artist wanted to. The reason why Buma/Stemra would not create a license back situation (according to Buma/Stemra) is that it would cost its members to much and there would be nothing to collect if they did this anyway.

From what I understand Buma/Stemra see little difference between what a commercial use is for art licensed with a Creative Commons non-commercial license and art not licensed with one (for members that participate in the pilot). Buma/Stemra see almost everything as a commercial use. What is going to happen if in the future rights organizations adopt the NonCommercials Creative Commons license under the Buma/Stemra conditions? Would this give the rights organizations the ability to charge non-profit organizations for the use Creative Commons Non Commercial licensed works in that territory ? Consider also: even a small flow from one rights organization might effect the art developing via Creative Commons licensing.

A way around this problem might be to add a feature to the license that would let the user of the license know that the art was administered by a rights organization (Buma/Stemra, yes no). By doing so creating a new aspect to the licenses. In time the rights organizations might work towards a Non Commercial use that resembles the Creative Commons Non Commercial use. For the rights organizations to build a new system they would have to dismantle/rebuild the old one. What incentive is there for a board of directors that are involved mostly with large publishers to do this?

Buma/Stemra must have been extremely aware of their system when this pilot started and knew from the very moment that it started that the conditions of a commercial use could not be changed. Were the Creative Commons team in the Netherlands aware of this?

Why would Buma/Stemra treat online users of content any differently to off line users ? Consider also: If Buma/stemra do treat a Non Commercial use differently online, then what is the effect of creative commons licenses on spaces outside the net now and in the future (where the pilot might be introduced)? Is two separate conditions for the use of content a good future to grow up in?

If this pilot continues, users of Creative Commons licensed works and artists that license using Creative Commons licenses are going to be confused.

Who am I to make any assumptions about Buma/Stemra? Although I am from Australia and was previously a member of APRA. Over the last months I have had the opportunity to tour music through the Netherlands. In this time I was able to get feedback from venue owners on how Buma/Stemra deal with people.

Here’s an article with more thoughts on the Creative Commons Non-commercial use.

iarts launched

October 26, 2007

Solutions to problems around us can be found by sharing and communicating ideas.

Reform APRA. Getting music artists in Australia to put pressure on APRA (collection society) to create a one member one vote system. Currently voting rights are structured so that for every 500 dollars that an artist or publisher collects, the artist or publisher gets one extra vote. With new technologies it makes sense to have equal voting rights for all members. Consider that the conditions that the board of APRA create, effect the way that members and non members deal with commercial and non-commercial spaces . APRA members are not able to use a creative commons license and remain within the terms of the agreement that the board of APRA maintain. Websitemyspace

Hungry Artists Feed Hungry People. Artists giving up commercial rights for the use of their content to a charity of choice. HAFHPmyspace icommonsOpenbusiness

Artist Press Kit. Creating a press kit (media station) for artists, where the media comes to the artist rather than the artist going to the media. openbusinessicommons

Create Incentives For Artists to be Artists. Create an organization that would collect
and distribute works that would be used in commercial streams.
Encourage artists to license works allowing commercial use. Create
incentives for artists. icommons

Titanic Radio. Why
not bring Wiki, Creative Commons, Public Domain content together and
make it available for broadcast through a wireless network to a device
with unlimited channels ?

Decentralized “broadcasting” network.
website icommons

Explain creative commons licenses to Artists. The objective of this project is to give
balanced advice to artists on the advantages, disadvantages, risks and
rewards that their use of Creative Commons licenses may involve. Icommons
wikifacebook

any feedback is much appreciated. jam@iarts.CC

WWW.IARTS.CC

unearthed radio

October 23, 2007

I would like to see Australian artists able to upload content to the JJJ unearthed website using a creative commons non-commercial license. Why is this a good idea ? This would create a stream of content that could be broadcast to non-profit organizations. This would lower costs for non-profits and give needed exposure to the art and ideas.

The ABC/JJJ is a non-profit organization that provides entertainment to the youth of Australia. Part of the ABC/JJJ’s mission is to connect art from within your community of listeners to your listeners. When considering this idea: APRA maintain a system that provides exposure to published works, not self published works. Self published non-professional artists are not encouraged to join APRA by APRA. With the net and new technologies the amount of content available for use has increased, yet the cost of content via the rights organizations has increased. With the price of content increasing there is little incentive to use self published works.

article in progress/free culture spaces without free culture

October 9, 2007

In the last weeks i have been performing tunes around Europe. In my down time I visited some non-profit places/spaces to look for more shows. What i found interesting was this: more than most of the content performed in these venues is owned by publishers & most of the revenue comes directly from the government to keep these spaces open. I found it slightly ironic that the public is paying to keep a venue open that is promoting published acts.

Most large towns and cities in central europe have free-culture spaces ( non-profit organizations that provide subsidized entertainment to the public). From what I understand the better ones work this way: they have a board of directors that is made up mostly by leaders within the community. These leaders decide what projects get approved and what ones don’t. Some of the spaces are old theaters that have been updated to bar/cafe/venue-theater. Here are some links to non-profit spaces I visited. http://www.spielboden.at http://www.palace.sg http://www.denhopsack.be http://www.stadel.at

These spaces want to stay open and competitive within the community, almost all the acts/productions that they promote

none of the music/art i heard/saw in these spaces is licensed with a creative commons license. M

article in progress “Some reasons why artists don’t use CC license”.

October 3, 2007

Most artists when they get started on their path mostly seem interested in distribution of ideas, rather than revenue. I spoke to a blues guitar player recently, when talking about money and music. “The music is free, what your paying for is the strings, the amp, the petrol and all the rest of it; but the music its free”. Its not easy for some artists to license their art with a CC license, Creative Commons is difficult to explain to an artists having a hard time. The void within the publishing system creates a magnet to almost every idea, creative commons is the only . I’m convinced that CC creates a better flow of culture within culture, yet getting that message through is not easy.

License:
The most effective distribution tool (i reckon) is an open license, yet for a commercial organization to use an open license can create problems. Recently virgin mobile in Australia used images, licensed with an open license without a model release. This resulted in legal action against virgin mobile and creative commons by the person that licensed their image using a creative commons open license. If the person using a license can sue the organization that creates the license, what is the future of that license ?

Publishing:
The publishers have created difficult circumstances for “self publishing” artist with new ideas. As publishing industries grow smaller, exploitation of the “self published artist” grows. Organization have sprung up all over the net that offer artists the opportunity to get through the wall at a cost. Its easy for an artist with little understanding of the publishing industry to be sucked into this system. Even when artists create ideas compatible with contemporary ideas, unless publishing industries have nurtured these ideas the ability to distribute the idea is not easy. One of my favourite artists “beck”, was related to the business when he started out. Publishing good ideas has less to do with the idea and more to do with who you know, even with

icommons

September 23, 2007

articles on icommons site

myspace & collection society

what is art to icommons

article Dominick Chen wrote about me at the summit. thanks


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