Ich wollte kaum glauben, was ich bei
http://www.inthemedievalmiddle.com/2012/11/medieval-manuscript-images-and-copyright.html
las. Aber es stimmt!
Access Reuse Guidance Notes for the Catalogue of Illuminated Manuscripts
The Catalogue of Illuminated Manuscripts content is now available for download and reuse. Although still technically in copyright in the UK (and a number of other common law territories) the images are being made available under a Public Domain Mark* which indicates that there are no copyright restrictions on reproduction, adaptation, republication or sharing of the content available from the site.
However the British Library asks that anyone reusing digital objects from this collection applies the following principles:
Please respect the creators – ensure traditional cultural expressions and all ethical concerns in the use of the material are considered, and any information relating to the creator is clear and accurate. Please note, any adaptations made to an item should not be attributed to the original creator and should not be derogatory to the originating cultures or communities.
Please credit the source of the material – providing a link back to the image on the British Library’s website will encourage others to explore and use the collections.
Please share knowledge where possible – please annotate, tag and share derivative works with others as well as the Library wherever possible.
Support the Public Domain – users of public domain works are asked to support the efforts of the Library to care for, preserve, digitise and make public domain works available. This support could include monetary contributions or work in kind, particularly when the work is being used for commercial or other for-profit purposes.
Please preserve all public domain marks and notices attached to the works – this will notify other users that the images are free from copyright restrictions and encourage greater use of the collection.
This usage guide is based on goodwill. It is not a legal contract. We ask that you respect it.
http://www.bl.uk/catalogues/illuminatedmanuscripts/reuse.asp
William Noel vom Walter-Art-Museum sagt:
Libraries containing special collections of medieval materials are normally very careful to write restrictive copyright on their materials. Part of this is historical; that is to say, when images of these manuscripts were published in books, it didn’t have to behave like digital data, and it didn’t have to be free for people to use in all sorts of ways and in different contexts. The images were just reproduced in other books. But those days are fast running out, and digital images need to be free, so that people can do what they need to do with them and what they want to do with them. That’s the great thing about digital data!
http://blog.ted.com/2012/05/29/the-wide-open-future-of-the-art-museum-qa-with-william-noel/
Zum Thema hier:
http://archiv.twoday.net/stories/5405864/
Pirckheimer-Salbuch http://www.bl.uk/catalogues/illuminatedmanuscripts/record.asp?MSID=1619&CollID=20&NStart=49
http://www.inthemedievalmiddle.com/2012/11/medieval-manuscript-images-and-copyright.html
las. Aber es stimmt!
Access Reuse Guidance Notes for the Catalogue of Illuminated Manuscripts
The Catalogue of Illuminated Manuscripts content is now available for download and reuse. Although still technically in copyright in the UK (and a number of other common law territories) the images are being made available under a Public Domain Mark* which indicates that there are no copyright restrictions on reproduction, adaptation, republication or sharing of the content available from the site.
However the British Library asks that anyone reusing digital objects from this collection applies the following principles:
Please respect the creators – ensure traditional cultural expressions and all ethical concerns in the use of the material are considered, and any information relating to the creator is clear and accurate. Please note, any adaptations made to an item should not be attributed to the original creator and should not be derogatory to the originating cultures or communities.
Please credit the source of the material – providing a link back to the image on the British Library’s website will encourage others to explore and use the collections.
Please share knowledge where possible – please annotate, tag and share derivative works with others as well as the Library wherever possible.
Support the Public Domain – users of public domain works are asked to support the efforts of the Library to care for, preserve, digitise and make public domain works available. This support could include monetary contributions or work in kind, particularly when the work is being used for commercial or other for-profit purposes.
Please preserve all public domain marks and notices attached to the works – this will notify other users that the images are free from copyright restrictions and encourage greater use of the collection.
This usage guide is based on goodwill. It is not a legal contract. We ask that you respect it.
http://www.bl.uk/catalogues/illuminatedmanuscripts/reuse.asp
William Noel vom Walter-Art-Museum sagt:
Libraries containing special collections of medieval materials are normally very careful to write restrictive copyright on their materials. Part of this is historical; that is to say, when images of these manuscripts were published in books, it didn’t have to behave like digital data, and it didn’t have to be free for people to use in all sorts of ways and in different contexts. The images were just reproduced in other books. But those days are fast running out, and digital images need to be free, so that people can do what they need to do with them and what they want to do with them. That’s the great thing about digital data!
http://blog.ted.com/2012/05/29/the-wide-open-future-of-the-art-museum-qa-with-william-noel/
Zum Thema hier:
http://archiv.twoday.net/stories/5405864/
Pirckheimer-Salbuch http://www.bl.uk/catalogues/illuminatedmanuscripts/record.asp?MSID=1619&CollID=20&NStart=49
KlausGraf - am Freitag, 30. November 2012, 00:09 - Rubrik: Kodikologie