Fwd: [cc-lessigletter] A Report on the Commons

fyi Creative Commons appeal:

——– Original Message ——– Subject: [cc-lessigletter] A Report on
the Commons Date: Wed, 18 Oct 2006 16:19:25 -0700 From: Lawrence Lessig
<[email protected]> <[email protected]> To: [email protected]
So, with this email, Creative Commons launches its second (now
officially) annual fundraising campaign. Last year, through the
course of that first campaign, I wrote a series of letters explaining
a bit about where Creative Commons came from, and where it was going.
Those letters (creatively labeled "Lessig Letters") are still
available here. [ http://creativecommons.org/support/letters ]. This
year, I'm going to talk a bit less, and in my place, we're going to
tell the stories of some of the extraordinary Creative Commons
projects that have been flourishing around the world.

But first, a bit of recap: Creative Commons is a nonprofit
corporation, dedicated to making it simpler for people to share and
build upon the work of others, consistent with the rules of
copyright. We provide free licenses that mark creative work with the
freedom the creator wants it to carry, so others can share the work,
or remix the work, or both share and remix the work, as the author
chooses.

We were motivated to begin this project about four years ago because
we realized a point that's obvious once you see it: that however
important the "all rights reserved" model of copyright is to some
creators, it is not the model that works for many, maybe most.
Scholars, scientists and educators, for example, are also creators,
but they don't depend upon the perfect control of their work -
deciding who can access it, or who can copy it, or who can build upon
it - for them to have the incentive to create great works. Perhaps
even more importantly, for the many who create for what our board
member, Joi Ito, calls the "sharing economy," "all rights reserved"
makes little sense. The millions of photos on Flickr [ http://
flickr.com/creativecommons ], for example, licensed under Creative
Commons licenses are made available by people who want to make their
creativity available to others without demanding payment upfront, or
control over how their work gets used. These people are creators -
some professional, but many amateur, where amateur doesn't mean
"amateurish," but rather people who do what they do for the love of
their work, and not for the money. Creative Commons provides free
tools to help these creators create in the way that they think best.

Creative Commons launched the licensing project in December 2002.
Within a year, there were more than 1,000,000 link-backs to our
licenses (meaning at least a million places on the web where people
were linking to our licenses, and presumptively licensing content
under those licenses). Within two years, that number was 12,000,000.
At the end of our last fundraising campaign, it had grown to about
45,000,000 link-backs to our licenses. That was December, 2005. In
the first six months of 2006, that number grew by almost 100,000,000
licenses. In June, we reported about 140,000,000 link-backs to our
licenses. We have hit a stride, and more and more of the net marks
itself with the freedoms that Creative Commons helps secure.

This success has been primarily built by thousands of volunteers
across the world who have worked to launch Creative Commons projects
locally, and worked to spread our movement to artists and educators
internationally. But it is supported by the contributions of many
more. Each year we ask more to join this movement in both ways. These
letters are invitations to join in the support for Creative Commons.

The plea for support in these letters will be subtle. (We've
perfected subliminal email.)
But if you'd like to opt out of these letters, just click here
http://creativecommons.org/about/newsletter#unsubscribe
Alternatively, if you know others who might enjoy this weekly
missive, click here
http://creativecommons.org/about/newsletter
and we'll invite them to join as well.
And if you'd like to just get it over, and donate, click here.
http://creativecommons.org/support/donate

Next week, I'll talk a bit more about the values behind our movement.
And the week following that, the first story from the front lines of CC.

———————————-

To link to or comment on this message, go to:
http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/6106

Archive of Lessig Letters
http://creativecommons.org/support/letters

Support the Commons
http://creativecommons.org/support

Learn More
http://creativecommons.org/learnmore

For comics and movies: http://creativecommons.org/about/licenses/how1,
http://mirrors.creativecommons.org/


_______________________________________________
cc-lessigletter mailing list

To unsubscribe visit
http://creativecommons.org/about/lessigletter#unsubscribe

Or send email with "unsubscribe" as subject to
[email protected]

Creative Commons newsletters are also posted to the CC Weblog. For back
issues please visit http://creativecommons.org/weblog/