Thursday, July 06, 2006

Rio, BBC og Gilberto Gil.

BBC World ringede mig op i Rio og fik en rapport, mens Jakob Fenger fra Superflex sad klar med en flaske Free Beer i et studie i Radiohuset. Selve lydbidden kan høres her - bemærk indledningen "Thank you for downloading from the BBC". Jeg glæder mig til at mine programmer kan downloades med et lille "tak fordi du downloadede dette program fra Danmarks Radio" - men der er nok et lille stykke vej endnu..

Jeg holder ferie nu, men vil forsøge at få mere op her på bloggen fra konferencen i Rio, som jeg forlod med en bunke bånd, indtryk og oplevelser.

"How can a Creative Commons licence lead to free beer?
In this week's programme we take a look at how copyright and beer collide,
The issue of copyright surrounding the work of writers, musicians and other artists can be a legal minefield. For new performers it can be particularly difficult when they are trying to get their work known. But a Creative Commons "iCommons" licence gets around such problems.The idea began just five years ago in the USA but has now spread to more than 70 countries and covers everything from music and videos to beer. Jakob Fenger of the artist's collective Superflex demonstrates the concept with a bottle of "free beer" - the recipe is freely available on the internet. Henrik Moltke reports fhttp://www.blogger.com/img/gl.link.gifrom an iCommons conference in Rio de Janiero where Microsoft announced that it was adding a Creative Commons licence option to its Office software and the Brazilian Culture Minister became the first to use it to publish his speech".

Se også denne video (tak til Justin Hall der satte den sammen):



Og denne - DotSub er gået igang med at oversætte til diverse sprog:

Eller denne remix af Nathaniel Stern

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