Creating a Free and Open Source Software ecosystem to facilitate government FOSS policy implementation
by Derek Keats
Using the present to create the future: How can we move South Africa from consumer to producer of web technologies
by Derek Keats
An ecosystem approach to building mobile opportunities into a business strategy
by Derek Keats
Last night I read a blog post by David Wiley in which he expressed 'Disgust with Creative Commons and the Free Culture Crowd'. I have known David online and offline since he came out with the first Open Content license long before anyone else was thinking about content licensing. That piece shocked me! It shocked me into realising that the 'Free Culture Crowd' are right, and they are right because non-free has been accepted as the norm. I have posted lots about this before, but basically, from interviews I have made with people, they often don't understand the reason for restrictions such as NonCommercial or NoDerivatives and they end up choosing them for the wrong reasons or out of imitation. From what I have seen on the CC discussion list, there was quite a bit of discussion about how to deal with this problem, and the results were arrived at as a result of that process. Until I read David's post, I always considered my strong criticism of the NC restriction was a result of its effect, practically, on reducing the quantity and quality of free educational content and negatively affecting who was allowed to contribute to improving education. David's post, however, made me realise that I am far more aligned to the strong views of the 'Free Culture Crowd' than I am to the lackadasical view of the Open Content Crowd.
Meanwhile, I took some of my photos - which are Free Culture (on Flickr) and mixed them with a song by The Liquid Kitchen - jut to create some more Free Culture. Who knows what we would get if more educational content was aligned to Free Culture rather than basically just being available on the Web. I think we have lost the plot.
I started this because I wanted to learn how to use the OpenShot video editing software (Free Software, Open Source) and specifically use it to do audio over with still images and add transitions. When I finished that, I was happy with what I had learned but not with the result. So for fun, I used PhotoFilmStrip, another FOSS application to redo the images and transitions. This is my second effort, I have deleted the first one as it did not work as well. It is still not great, but it was fun, and I am learning.
The music is by 'The Liquid Kitchen', a rock band located in Houston, TX, USA. I have never met them, but I love their music (I am a rocker from way back) and they made it available under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. They are at http://theliquidkitchen.net/ This is the power of remix, and of digital freedom - of Free Culture.
The license has to be Creative Commons: Attribution-ShareAlike but YouTube doesn't offer that option, which makes this a bit messy. Do I choose standard YouTube license or Attribution license but mean something different. A bit of a mess YouTube. Get your ass in gear and fix that.
If you have been reading my blog or tweets, you know that I believe that the Open Educational Resources (OER) movement is a nearly total failure. It is a failure because the people who should be taking leadership in seeing the creation of a world where educational content is shared freely have held back from the notion of freedom, preferring instead to create a world that only some categories of humans are allowed to contribute into. Much of this appears to be done out of ignorance, or out of a desire to increase global brand value. Two good examples of bad examples are MIT Open Courseware and Sal Khan's Khan Academy. The biggest technical reason for the failure of the OER movement is the indiscriminate use of the Creative Commons License with a NonCommercial restriction. This restriction's most powerful effect is the opposite of what most people seem to believe when they use it. However, it is mostly used because of our common 'herd mentality'. MIT uses it and the rest of us follow.
I recently made a comment on a friend's Facebook post about unglue.it. I said that the notion that they are using Creative Commons Licenses doesn't make it worthwhile, since Creative Commons has some evil licenses. In this case I was referring to the NonCommercial (NC) and NoDerivatives (ND) restrictions, but mainly the NC one. I use words like 'evil' to show the depth of my concern for the damage that the indiscriminate use of these license restrictions cause.
I specifically said of unglue.it, "I can't see any indication of what licenses they use. Since Creative Commons has some really evil licenses, this is no guarantee that ungluing the book makes it any more useful than leaving it full copyright, but available as a no-cost download. People misuse the name of Creative Commons as if it was all one thing."
The reply came back that pure copyleft or public domain polarises the world, and doesn't allow for people to graduate their sharing capacity, or choose under which conditions their work can be used.
This is something with which I agree whole heartedly. I am writing a book, and when it is finished - if ever - I will publish it under a license that uses the NC restriction. But that is a LEGITIMATE and MEANINGFUL use of NC, most uses are not legitimate or meaningful, they are just follow-the-leader decisions that are not thought through or properly understood.
My friend went on to say that the ability to select a legally viable, and enforceable sharing that still opens the door to education resources, patents, research, music, books or film - even without remix/derivative powers or the ability for others to use it commercially is surely vastly healthier for all of us than permission-based copyright?
I partially agree with this. It would be easier to agree more fully if we were rational beings. We are not. But still, it is hard to disagree with the statement, so again, the issue is not the technology (the license), but with the way in which it is used. A chainsaw is a good piece of technology, but if you use it indiscriminately and try to use it for everything, you are bound to cause harm. The NC restriction is the chainsaw of OER, it is only that the harm being done is not obvious unless you are used to participating in initiatives that enjoy genuine freedom, and are also used to thinking about digital freedom and thinking long term. That's the rub.
"For a robust read/write world, we need bridges across the ever widening chasm between traditional copyright and free & open works. It's worth revisiting cooperation and Game Theory to see why a binary decision - all open or all closed - keeps us locked in a very disappointing outcome. Not everyone is ethical or can keep their selfish plunderer at bay."
I have been a long-standing critic of the use of the non-commercial restriction on so-called open educational resources. Most people choose it for entirely the wrong reason. The Executive director of MIT Open Courseware, for example, once told me that MIT professors are not smart enough to understand liceses without this restriction. Therefore, they use it because they have professors who are not smart. Most people choose it because of the 'why should anyone be able to use MY (ME I ME MINE) content and make money from it. But the NC restriction is not necessary to prevent the kind of wanton prostitution of their world and life changing content that they imagine. The ShareAlike clause on top of Attribution does that.
One of the problems must surely be the creative commons license chooser. It says entirely the wrong thing, and kind of implies that the only way to prevent this wanton sale of your awesome work is to tick the NO where it says "Allow commercial uses of your work?"
I wonder, what the results would be if, instead of "Allow commercial uses of your work?" this item said "Prevent this item from being shared freely and remixed freely?" or perhaps "Prevent commercial entities from building on and improving my content?" or "Dissallow all elements of my content from being used to build freely usable educational resources for use in a developing country?"
The fact is, choosing the NC restriction is the ultimate act of conceit - you think your content is so good people will just sell it if you use a BY-SA license - and my goodness, nobody could ever improve on it. It is also an act of selfishness - you prevent your content from being mixed with the work of people who believe in freedom. In some - perhaps most - cases it is an act of ignorance.
Either way, we need to spread the word about this problem, and try to convince people to use this restriction only when it is genuinely necessary.
The license chooser is at http://creativecommons.org/choose/
P.S. If I sound like I have a cold, its because I do, mid winter in Johannesburg.
I made this presentation in 2007, and I was hoping that by 2012, things would have improved. Instead, they have gotten worse, so it still seems totally relevant today. If I can find the original slides, I will update it and make it into a YouTube video.
The Non-commercial restriction in educational content causes more problems than it solves, particularly when a resource might be useful in the developing world where people may not wish to preclude benefit from enhancements made by people who wish to allow commercial use.
Please note that I am changing my default license to Creative Commons Attribution (without the ShareAlike) in protest against those who wish to keep education from gaining benefit from input by companies and other commercial interests. As a software developer, I know that if software had a NC restriction, there would be no Free and Open Source Software today, I would not be writing this, and there would be no OER as the base from which it evolved would not exist. Therefore, if you wish to download this presentation from SlideShare and use it under a BY license, please do so with my blessing.
All around the world, educational institutions are recognizing the value of freely sharing educational curricula, content, learning activities and tools, as well as collaborating in their further development and extension under the umbrella of open educational resources (OER). OER is generally defined as educational materials and resources offered freely and openly for anyone to use and, under some licenses – to re-mix, to improve and to redistribute. This week, UNESCO is hosting the global OER congress in Paris, yet, the OER world is in a mess, with one of the key features of OER - reuse - largely being ignored by OER producers.
Having been involved in Free and Open Educational Resources strategy development in two higher education institutions, I am sharing here the recommendations regarding the choice of a license. Two particular restrictions should be avoided unless they are absolutely necessary: NonCommercial (NC) and NoDerivatives (ND).
1. Where no immediate commercial revenue is expected
The default license for content produced should be the Creative Commons Attribution (by) or Attribution-Share Alike (by-sa) licence. These are the licences that most respects freedom, by allowing copying for any purpose and production of derivative works. The second option requires that those derivative works are made available under identical terms. It is this restriction that ensures any derivative works, even if done for commercial purposes, come back to the author and the community. If you are concerned about commercial abuse, this is a far better means to prevent it than using the NonCommercial restriction.
2. Where content is expected to be published commercially
The appropriate licence is Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial or Attribution-ShareAlike-NonCommercial (by-sa-nc), which allows content to be copied and - in the second case - extended for non-commercial purposes only. It may seem counter-intuitive, but content published in this manner generally earns greater revenue from sales than content published under full copyright (perhaps give an example here). Following the elapse of a period of time after which commercial revenue is unlikely, to be gained, the licence will revert to Attribution (by) or Attribution-ShareAlike (by-sa) even for work in this category. The recommended time period is 5 years, but the authors are obviously free to alter this to a shorter or longer period depending on circumstances. This is the only legitimate use of the NonCommercial restriction, all other uses produce undesirable results.
3. Where derivative works are not appropriate, such as when the item is an opinion piece
The appropriate licence under is Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivatives (by-nd), which permits only verbatim copying. This is the only legitimate use of the NoDerivatives restriction that I can think of, but it has unfortunately crept into some OER materials for no obvious reason, or for reasons that are perceived but probably not true.
If OER producers cannot get the license right so that it permits reuse, then OER is largely irrelevant. Indeed, badly licensed OER is probably as bad or worse then 'all rights reserved' use of copyright.
See http://freedomdefined.org/Definition for more information.
Here you will find the raw materials (where I have them) for the educational videos that I have posted to YouTube. These videos are mostly for Grade 12 Life Sciences (Biology) in South Africa. Although they are targed at the new CAPS syllabus, I have made them in such a way that they can also be used for the current syllabus, which is still in use for another two years.
Yesterday, Trudi van Wyk, who I respect and like a great deal, posted on facebook about the OER contress, and a link to http://oercongress.weebly.com/
I commented, "Please can we try to get it right, and find a way to clean up the mess we are currently in, and getting dug deeper and deeper into."
Someone else then asked "Do you care to elaborate, Derek?" so I pointed her to yesterday's blog post, in which my anger at the so-called OER nonsense was a bit naked. And I am angry at the corruption of something good, and the turning of it into a disaster for education.
In protest against the blind and foolish use the NC restriction in so many #OER, I have changed my default CC license from BY-SA to BY. If you want to know the biggest reason for the mess, the use of NC is quite high among them. The blind dumping of tonnes of institutional garbage with NC restriction does absolutely nothing for the cause. If we did that with software, there would be no Free Software (open source) in the world today. NC is killing everything that some of us tried to pioneer, and turning it into a competition to see who can claim the that they have dumped the most garbage in the pit.
I have no idea why people believe that the contribution of commercial entities to education would be a bad thing. Maybe they don't believe that at all, maybe - because they have never actually done free and open sharing before in the way that those of us who do software have - just maybe, they are being misled. Maybe even the KhanAcademy, whose negative impact on educational sharing is greater than anyone elses, is just misled.
But for sure, if we are going to have more and more institutions and governments contributing to OER, maybe it is time to put some values back into the movement. Removing the NC restriction would be one way to regain the values that the OER movement has lost. Mentioning it, educating people about its dangers, having explicit guidelines, those are all things that could be done to regain some sanity. Right now, the OER movement has, in my opinion, lost its way and dropped the most important educational values.
Anyway, from here on, this post all my photos, presentations, educational content, videos, etc will have a BY license. I believe in sharing. Do you?
I have been doing open educational resources (or Free and Open Educational Resources) since long before there was a name for it, even before David Wiley coined the term open content. Since Creative Commons came along, I have produced everything I have written, recorded or photographed with a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike or just Atribution license. This is the license that is most like the GNU GPL that I use for software. My photos alone have seen hundreds of thousands of uses, and I have enjoyed seeing them used.
But when I look for so-called open educational resources these days, mostly I don't find any that I can use. There are three reasons for this scarcity of useful FOER:
I am not sure how many original images of DNA molecules there are, but the molecule must have been drawn or modeled at least 10 000 times, but most of the drawings that are available under free licenses are inferior to terrible. If only that energy could have gone into creating a decent rendering of the molecule in an open application such as blender, and if only the source for that molecule was available. It would be so much more useful than 10 000 crummy illustrations, most with a NC restriction, as if someone was likely to make commercial use of such junk.
The reason for this lamentable state of affairs is the fact that there is almost no real community in the open educational resources arena, and unlike software, junk doesn't simply not work. A while back, I wrote a paper about how communities of people with knowledge could come together and create educational resources, modeled on software creation, but this kind of community is rare. Probably part of the reason for this is someone can release crap and feel good about it, and even get millions of dollars of donor funding to produce YARDM (Yet Another Ridiculous DNA Molecule) and the like.
It has become fashionable to use what I call the evil NonCommercial restriction to remove true freedom from educational content resources. If software developers were as dumb as content authors in the use of this restriction, we would have no Free Software today, there would be no 'open source', no GNU/Linux, no Android, none of that stuff. Oddly, people who author content seem to believe that preventing commercial players from benefiting education is a good thing. Duh!
I have talked to well over a thousand people now who have used the NC restriction, and only one of them used it correctly, and that was Larry Lessig. One of the biggest and nastiest syndicates involved in using the NC restriction is the Khan academy, which gets substantial amounts of money to flout educational freedom as if it didn't matter. The Khan academy represents the purest form of evil in this space, becasue their content is actually mostly not too bad. People who care should really buoycott Sal Khan's growing evil empire before it chows even more money producing its contaminated shareware. The Khan academy really pisses me off because they market their evil so well, partly becasuse it is good stuff. But being good stuff does not make it right stuff. And there are lots of others, the world seems to be full misguided well meaning people these days.
Another notable absence with open educational resources is the absence of the equivalent of the source code. Without the source of the content, whether it is images, videos with animations, or just plain text, without the source code there is no open educational resource that is equivalent to Free or open source software. It simply does not exist.
Let me repeat that. Without the rawest possible source files, open educational resources that are open and free in the same way as software DO NOT EXIST.
It doesn't have to be that way. KhanAcademy and its ilk could choose to make their raw materials available, and choose to use a free license. They lose nothing in doing so, but they map the way for true freedom in educational resources. Beeing popular and attracting donor funds that could potentially have funded content that is more free carries with it an awesome responsibility. Instead of using that responsibility wisely, they bask in the glory of the moment and further lead the OER field down entirely the wrong path.
The (Free and) Open Educational Resrources movement needs to wake up to these three problems, and do something about them. Otherwise, admit that you are just making shareware, and that genuine educational freedom is not important, the future is not important. Maybe it is not. But it saddens me. I had hoped for more. I still do.