Cory Doctorow
Copyright Information
Copyright Information for www.fromoutoftheblue.com, The Miracles Journal web site and A Course In Miracles Notebook
Summary of Copyright information as it pertains to this web site for those not inclined to read the entire copyright commentary.
The contents of this web site, www.fromoutoftheblue.com are copyright, 2008, by Peter Demers. The copyright includes all the text, graphics, images, and format presented on this web site, unless otherwise specifically noted and which specific note is adjacent to a specific item (ie. found on the same page). In addition to the copyright, a Creative Commons license 3.0 is applicable to most of the content on this site, unless otherwise noted. This license allows a non-commercial1 copying of the content with attribution, author’s name and source (this web site, http://www.fromoutoftheblue.com), and that derivative works are not permitted without permission.
I have been listening to Cory Doctorow’s 2 podcast for quite sometime now. I found it mainly because he was one of the first writer’s to put his stories online in a podcast. I have to admit that I haven’t listened to all of the podcast readings yet because the genre seemed more geared to teens. Sprinkled in the podcast subscription Cory put all of his talks, speeches, lectures, and interviews which are all about copyright and digital rights management, and the like, and the draconian nature of most of these. I was introduced to Creative Commons 3. I’d say I was a convert to the Creative Commons philosophy, but I was already bent in that direction. One thing about I did not understand about Creative Commons licensing, until I looked and read the manifest on their web site, was that a Creative Commons license is not a replacement or substitute for copyright. I think Cory touches on this in his talks, but does not make it clear. Creative Commons licensing applies to copyrightable works. A Creative Commons license, and there are several to choose from, is a layer over a copyrighted work. Commercial copyright is not waived nor relinquished with the application of a Creative Commons license.
I am making a big deal about copyright here because some of the work I’ve done and that I’m presenting on this web site is based on a document in the public domain. Specifically, that work is
The offer of my edition of
Of course, a derivative work, changing
Helen probably did say copyright The Course and probably did so in exhaustion. The editing of The Course has been said to have taken sixteen months and the whole process over ten years. It was closure for her. It was done. And what about Bill, the other scribe? He was already dead at the time of the court case. But, without Bill, the miracle of producing
Please see the CreativeCommons.org web site for more information:
about licensing and FAQ
- 1. Non-commercial: There is almost no such thing anymore. If your publication is free, on a free to use web service, it is really an advertising service for the hosting company. And, not-for-profit (NFP) is just another way of doing business and some are essentially fronts for government activities. Strictly speaking, a non-commercial use would be a web site you pay for out of pocket, with no ads, and nothing to sell. Does anyone know where the line is drawn?
- 2. Cory Doctorow’s web sites: Craphound; Boing Boing, editor; Electronic Freedom Foundation
- 3. Creative Commons: Creative Commons", Joi Ito, co-founder and CEO







