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Meta
Category Archives: creative commons
to Japan
Creative Commons Japan and Japan’s National Institute of Informatics are hosting a symposium Monday, March 27. The CCJP event is in the morning (info); NII’s is in the afternoon (info: JP; EN). Continue reading
Posted in creative commons
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From CC: The First CC Salon

Please join us for the first CC Salon, taking place in San
Francisco on Wednesday, March 8 from 6pm-9pm at Shine (1337 Mission Street).
CC Salon is a casual get-together focused on conversation and community-building
and is open to anyone interested in art, technology, education, and copyright.
Featuring presentations by:
Josh Kinberg (FireAnt)
Eddie Codel (Geek Entertainment TV)
James Wagner Au (Second Life)
And music by:
Minus Kelvin (ccMixter)
We look forward to seeing you there!
Posted in creative commons
9 Comments
A special Lessig-Blog invitation
Photo CC-BY licensed by Lainmoon.
A special invitation to Lessig-Blog readers: On Friday, February 17, at 6 pm, Elisabeth Shue will introduce Davis Guggenheim‘s newly CC licensed film, Teach. This extraordinary film grows out of Guggenheim’s Peabody Award winning film, The First Year. The film is about 30 minutes long, and there’s a reception afterwards.
To attend, you MUST RSVP. The event will be held at the San Francisco LGBT Community Center, at 1800 Market Street, San Francisco. Come if you can, but again, RSVP if you want to come. Continue reading
Posted in creative commons
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CC supported – thank you
We beat the target by lots. When all the check from the mail were counted, by about $30,000. And then by about $120,000 when we add the downpayment on the biggest surprise — a $1,000,000 gift by someone who (for now) is anonymous. More as soon as we can, but for now, thanks to everyone. Continue reading
Posted in creative commons
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So we’ve met the target, and Microsoft put us over the top
At 12:30pm, an envelope from Redmond appeared at the Creative Commons office. Inside, a check for $25,000. From Microsoft.
We’ve made our target in the most (pleasantly) surprising of ways. Thanks to everyone who helped on this, and especially those who pulled so hard at the end. Of course, more will still help lots, so no reason to stop now. Support CC. Continue reading
Posted in creative commons
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Less than $10,000, and a Flickr match as well
We’re almost there, but the coolest (and something I had missed) is this Flickr match: $10k from Flickr and a challenge to the community to match it.
Posted in creative commons
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We’ve got 3 days, and we need LESS THAN $25,000
Ok, these annoying posts will end, hopefully before my readership disappears. But we are extremely close. We’ve got three days left, and are within $25,000 of meeting our goal.
There have been lots of great questions about the goal, about what happens if we miss it, and about why we need money anyway (“aren’t the licenses already written?”). We should have done better explaining all this upfront. My fault for not seeing that more clearly. But from the better-late-than-never department, here is a bit to address some of these questions.
(1) Where’d you get the goal of $225,000?
To understand this, you need to know something about the “public support test” that is part of the IRS review all tax-exempt non-profits suffer after 4 years of life. That test essentially asks, how diverse is your funding support. If most of your support comes from a few foundations, then there’s a risk you’ll lose your tax exempt status. I let this issue remain unresolved for too long. But this is the year the numbers will be calculated, and hence the push right now.
When we saw how much we needed to raise to pass the test, we divided up areas of support. The $225,000 is the amount we absolutely must raise from a general public appeal. If we meet that, and the other goals we’ve also set, then we’re fine.
(2) What happens if we fail this test?
The risk is that we’ll lose our public charity status. That’s critical to us because some foundations are not able to support organizations without a public charity status. And however fantastic the support from the public has been so far, we still absolutely must continue to get foundation support.
(3) What do you need the money for anyway?
This is the core question I should have done lots more to address much earlier in this process. For its clear many people think CC’s just a bunch of servers serving licenses. Indeed, that’s precisely what CC will always be — we’ve built a contingency plan to assure our licenses are served for a “limited time” (in the sense that copyright terms are for “limited times”). But right now, we’re much more than a bunch of servers.
As I explained in the final post to the Lessig Letters, CC has a staff of about 20 people world wide. (I’m technically on the staff as its CEO, but I’m unpaid). Those twenty work in four separate offices. Our Berlin office manages the process of porting licenses internationally. Our London office is building the international community of the iCommons project. Boston runs the Science Commons project. And San Francisco does all the rest. That staff is underpaid (relative to their contemporaries at least), but even at bargain basement wages, it is not cheap to keep the lights on. One fourth of the staff is technical; three are lawyers. All are working extraordinarily hard to spread and build CC.
We’re proud of the fact that a very high percentage of our funds goes directly to “programs and services.” (82% in 2004, with 18% spent on administration, and 8% on fundraising. See our audited statements for 2004 posted here. But that’s 82% of a large number. We expect that to accomplish all we’ve promised in 2006, our budget will be close to $2m.
What have we promised? Well, in addition to growing license adoption, and spreading the tools to integrate CC into critical content creating apps, I’ve signaled four key projects for the year. Two we’ve been quite public about: (1) the cc-commercial project, and (2) the free content license interoperability project. And then there are two more secret projects that I’ve described here. This is the work we have left to do. This is the work that needs your support.
So three more days if this pestering. Or one, if we can get $25,000 in the door by tomorrow.
Posted in creative commons
63 Comments
We’ve got 8 days, and we need $57,000
Just about $7500 a day needed. Spread the word. Spread CC. Support here. Continue reading
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We’ve got 9 days, and we need $75,000
It was a good first day — $25,000. At this rate, I can take off Christmas. Thanks to everyone for spreading the word, and thanks to the amazing mix of people who have been giving. Any bit counts. So please jump here and let’s finish this already. Continue reading
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We’ve got 10 days, and we need $100,000. Please help
So we have 10 days left in the Creative Commons campaign. This is not a drill. We are down to the last $100,000, and really need your support — both for the very cool projects we’re launching (see, e.g., the license interoperability project, discussed recently in Technology Review, and the two new projects announced this week), and for the very uncool pressure we’re under from IRS regulations to demonstrate “public support” as a condition for keeping our (absolutely essential as in we can’t live with out it) tax exempt status. So please, anything helps. Lots of anything helps lots. Continue reading
Posted in creative commons
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